Eugene Mirabelli

The World at Noon is about Nicolo, who sets out to visit his ailing mother, sees his father (dead these past three years), has lunch with his daughter and falls in love with his daughter’s friend, Roxanne. It’s also about Nicolo’s handsome wife, Maeve, a strong woman with her own interests, including a romance she embarks on for comic relief. The story takes place against a background that includes Nicolo’s youthful affair with his aunt Regina, which in turn calls up old family legends about the great grandfather who was born with the flanks and hindquarters of a horse, and the great grandmother from the bordello, a woman so beautiful her looks could stun. But through all this the drama focuses on Nicolo and Maeve and their children as the family unravels one way and knits up another. The World at Noon is a novel where everyday events mingle with ancestral myths, a book that cascades from generation to generation and from the warm waters of the Mediterranean to the snowy fields of New England.

The World at Noon


The World at Noon was published by Guernica Editions in Toronto and a few remaining copies of the original edition are available from Spring Harbor Press, P.O. Box 346, Delmar, NY 12054.

Selected Works

Click on the line above for a quick list of what critics have said about Gene Mirabelli's fiction over the years
Fiction
The story begins in mid-nineteenth century Sicily and ends in twentieth century Massachusetts -- and a lot of remarkably strange, passionate and utterly true things (the way fiction is true) happen in between.
Catholic parochial school graduate becomes a pornographic movie actress, has a child and a mystic vision of herself as the Mother of Milk and Honey, establishes a commune to love the loveless.

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