Harvill Secker first paperback edition - 2025
This is the second novel in Joseph O'Connor's trilogy about Rome during the Nazi Occupation (I0th September 1943 to 4th June 1944). I read the first book - My Father's House - only five months' ago (see my Blog of 14th January 2026) and found it gripping and atmospheric in its intensity. The follow-up is in a very similar vein - after all it describes comparable situations involving the same cast of characters, Hence, I suppose inevitably, it doesn't pack quite the same 'punch'. This time the central figure is the fictitious Contessa Giovanna ('Jo') Landini, rather than the Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty. Widowed, Jo volunteered as a Red Cross motorcycle courier on the outbreak of war. Although she has inherited the splendid Palazzo Landini on her husband's death, she - like the rest of the 'Choir' - has based herself in the Vatican City.
I found I had to get used to the author's grammatical style again, which tended to jar, particularly in the first chapters. Short, verbless sentences occurring rather too often and which gave a staccato effect to the narrative. It works with dialogue, but not so well with prose paragraphs. O'Connor also retained the device, used in his first book, of interspersing 1960s radio transcripts and written memoires with the wartime events. It meant the reader had a more rounded view of what took place, from the several viewpoints of the members of the 'Choir'. Notwithstanding the (personal) irritant I felt from the grammar, I found the story had more of a structure running through it this time.
A Polish airman, Bruno, is shot down over the city. He bales out: soon, he knows, the dizziness will put him to merciful sleep, for he is falling too fast, the chute opened late, and his heart starts to sputter, and the words of the Act of Contrition will not be squeezed from his tongue as he turns in the air, feet up, head down, wrestling with the ropes that try to tighten around his torso. Falling past the terrified seabirds. In fact, he survives, but, badly wounded, he has to flee from two German soldiers. Bullets pit at his back...he jinks, ducks, like a dribbling footballer, past the wall-high mural of a scowling, arms-folded Mussolini spattered with slops of red paint. A magenta-haired, high-cheekbone woman smoking at the door-way of a bridal shop sees him coming and mashes her cigarette out with her shoe. Large-eyed. Purple-lipped. She might be thirty. She beckons. He is saved - for the time being. His injured left thumb turns septic and worsens. There is also a serious infection developing from another wound to his neck
Thus, the major story in the novel is - once the Choir hear about Bruno - how to get him treatment and, if necessary a safe transit to the Vatican. O'Connor clearly knows his Rome, its byways, conduits, catacombs, deserted buildings. The other overall surveyor is Commander Paul Hauptmann, the Nazi Gestapo Chief, charged with tracking down the hundreds of Allied servicemen, escaped PoWs and others, and who is constantly being upbraided by Himmler for his failures. He moves into Jo Landini's Palazzo and develops a sort of perverse 'crush' on her. The author has more than one chapter which portrays a fine and believably psychology relating to the Nazi chief. O'Connor is also good at charting the increasing tension within the 'Choir'; in some instances, almost character disintegrations. There are fall-outs between the acknowledged leader, Major Sam Derry, who borders on martinet behaviour, and the volatile Jo Landini and the teenage daughter of Delia Murphy-Kiernan, Blon. Hugh O'Flaherty is also showing signs of exhaustion; Sir Francis (Frank) D'Arcy Osborne, urbane as ever is often at the end of his tether.
Two other, well-drawn characters are both American - Robert Weldrick, one of a tank crew captured in North Africa and who has escaped from the prisoner-of-war camp at Passo Corese; and 'Moon' Moody, who must have been a problem to his parents and anyone who met him from then on. Both successfully hide from the German patrols and, eventually, look after the increasingly, and dangerously, ill Bruno. How the latter is successfully brought to the Vatican City and to proper medical care, finishes off the main story.
The final Coda, when Jo Landini, Delia Kiernan and Bruno Wiśniewski (and his wife) meet up in County Kerry for a commemoration Mass for the late Monsignor O'Flaherty, is especially poignant. Taking a golf ball from his pocket, [Bruno] places it on the grave...on the street, he notices in the distance an older man. Dark-suited, homburg-hatted, now leaning through the passenger window. I can't be, Bruno thinks. Not after all this time. Weldrick comes towards him, arms outstretched in silent embrace. For a long time, nothing is said.
In 1962, Marianna De Vries, one of the Choir, writes a statement in lieu of an interview. The story of our Roman Escape Line has been characterised as a tale of courage. But it was always a story of friendship, first and last. The friends we knew and those we did not, some fleetingly encountered, others never at all. I am no sentimentalist, but I call it a love story... And the way O'Connor tells it, that affection - even during the moments of angry and exhausting arguments - shines through.







