Book Summary and Reviews of Beginning Middle End by Valeria Luiselli

Beginning Middle End by Valeria Luiselli

Beginning Middle End

A Novel

by Valeria Luiselli

  • Critics' Consensus (10):
  • Readers' Rating (2):
  • Publishes:
  • Jul 28, 2026, 368 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

From the beloved, award-winning author of the culture-changing hits Lost Children Archive and Tell Me How It Ends comes her most powerful and page-turning novel yet: the tale of a mother and daughter traveling together after the collapse of a marriage and the dissolution of their traditional family structure.

Valeria Luiselli's novel opens the morning a mother and her teenage daughter arrive in Sicily, during a summer of rapidly-changing winds, volcanic rumbles, and sudden tempests. They've landed near the ancient ruins where the narrator's grandmother worked long ago on an archaeological dig. How do you begin again, the mother wonders, pondering her family line, and what if the new beginning you're imagining is actually the end?

While the mother tries to figure out how to reconstruct their lives together—cooking meals side by side, reading out loud to each other, playing chess, bickering and making-up—her deeply intelligent, inquisitive daughter begins to take the reins of the story. She becomes increasingly curious about her great-grandmother's past as a digger in archaeological sites and ancient tombs, and urges her mother to leave their enclosed day-to-day in search for answers about their family's past and future.

Beginning Middle End evolves into a road novel of exquisite tenderness. In their drive through Sicily, mother and daughter cross paths with the island's migrants, storekeepers, and elders, but also its volcanoes, its winds and its waters. As their trip progresses, it becomes a journey to origins—not just to the familial past across continents, languages, and generations, but also further back to a mythical and geological past. With her own mother showing signs of dementia, the narrator confronts the primary questions of life: Where is home? Where do we dwell and seek safety? How are a family's memories made and what happens when they disappear?

Warm, funny, and poetic, this novel is an ode to imagination and possibility in dark times.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"Luiselli, a Mexican American writer who's focused on borderlands immigration in previous fiction and nonfiction, has made displacement her great theme...An offbeat migration story as piercing and artful as any in Luiselli's oeuvre." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Arresting and layered...Throughout, Luiselli makes reference to ancient Greek and Roman mythology, which adds depth to her profound portrait of the relationship between mother and daughter as they navigate the new shape of their family and try to understand each other. It's a masterpiece." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"What sets Valeria Luiselli's new novel apart is its clarity, its immediacy, its vividness. Not just the characters, but the very rooms, the views from windows and the streets, are created with precision and lucidity. And then there are the feelings and the memories, the desires and the fears—these are etched with an astonishing sense of accuracy." —Colm Tóibín, author of The News from Dublin

"This book is a profound meditation on parenthood and the nature of change, the essence of story, of accounts and why we account, of what should be accounted for. And at its core is the impossible attempt to return something lost and unknowable—something from the past that sees into the future. I loved it, beginning, middle, and end. It's a beautiful, maybe perfect, novel." —Tommy Orange, author of Wandering Stars

"Inventive, brilliant, playful, and transporting, Beginning Middle End dazzles on every page. It is a novel about love, self-invention, and lore, both historical and familial. Valeria Luiselli is extravagantly gifted—a writer possessed of both wisdom and an inquisitive, powerful heart." —Katie Kitamura, author of Audition

This information about Beginning Middle End was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

Reader Reviews

Write your own reviewwrite your own review

Janine_S

Poignant mother-daughter road trip
A poignant mother and daughter road trip that becomes a story of recapturing the past, defining the future and creating a new story.

A divorced mother and her twelve year old daughter take off on the mother’s European book tour eventually coming to Sicily to visit places where the author’s grandmother lived. This woman worked on an archeological dig and pocketed a tile with a picture of the shape-shifting Greek god Proteus. The tile has been passed down to the women for generations but the daughter believes it should be returned to the Villa Romana del Casale. While on Sicily, Mount Etna is erupting and wildfires emerge. They meet Middle Eastern refugees who are being scorned by the locals. The beauty of the land and sea - even the wind - is captured in the journey’s story. But in telling their story the mother and daughter use ancient classics like the Odyssey, voices from the past like Pliny, and ancient myths. These all blend into a lovely story.

The book has three parts: Levante (The First Part), Ponente (The Other Part), and Scirocco (The Last Part). The first two parts are told from the mother’s perspectives and the last from the daughter’s. The naming convention for the chapters relate to terms frequently used in the Mediterranean area either directionally or for weather. I found this interesting given the book is about a journey and the characters are seeking destinations for home - they want to visit the grandmother’s home in Philosophiana. There is a final chapter filled with pictures and postcards and while there is a reference to these all coming from the author’s personal collection, but which author?

It’s hard to describe this book or the story. The first two parts are told almost in vignettes around a named topic of theme. For instance there are whole section dedicated to different types of wind and storms and to the sea or geological elements of the island. In part three the story is more of an essay. This is my first novel by this author so her writing style I found most intriguing.

I concluded this was a multifaceted story. It’s about reinventing one’s self, reestablishing roots, devoting that we are all immigrants and that love binds us all.

My thanks to NetGalley and Knopf for granting me access to this ARC.

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Author Information

Valeria Luiselli Author Biography

Photo: Diego Berruecos/Gatopardo

Valeria Luiselli is an acclaimed writer of both fiction and nonfiction. She is the author of the essay collection Sidewalks; the novels Faces in the Crowd and The Story of My Teeth; and, most recently, Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay in Forty Questions and the international bestseller Lost Children Archive. She is the recipient of a MacArthur "Genius Grant," and the winner of two Los Angeles Times Book Prizes, an American Book Award, the Folio Prize, and the 2021 International Dublin Literary Award. Her work has been translated into more than thirty languages. She lives in New York City.

Name Pronunciation
Valeria Luiselli: vuh-LAIR-ee-uh loo-SELL-ee

Other books by Valeria Luiselli at BookBrowse
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