Where Angels Fear to Tread - E. M. Forster
E. M. Forster's first novel packs a punch in a small package. It begins with a shock for the respectable Herriton family: Lilia, a young widow, has gone to Italy and impulsively married Gino, a charming Italian man they see as utterly beneath her. The family dispatches Lilia's brother-in-law, Philip, to undo the damage. He's a well-meaning but timid man who believes in art and beauty from a safe distance. What he finds in the fictional town of Monteriano isn't a simple rescue mission, but a vibrant, chaotic world that challenges everything he thinks he knows.
The Story
The plot kicks into a higher gear after a tragedy. Lilia dies in childbirth, leaving a baby boy—a new heir—in Italy with his father, Gino. The Herritons, especially Philip's domineering mother and his rigid sister Harriet, decide the child must be 'saved' from his Italian upbringing and brought to England for a 'proper' education. They launch a second, more desperate mission. This time, even Caroline Abbott, a friend who initially accompanied Lilia, gets involved. Their plan to essentially kidnap the baby is born from good intentions but is blinded by prejudice. What unfolds is a tense, emotional disaster that forces every character to confront their own flaws, passions, and capacity for cruelty and grace.
Why You Should Read It
This book is a masterclass in how setting is a character. Forster paints England as cold, judgmental, and ruled by 'what will people think,' while Italy is all sunlight, wine, and raw emotion. The real magic is watching Philip's slow awakening. He starts as a spectator to life and is gradually pulled into the messy center of it. Gino, the Italian husband, could have been a cartoon villain, but Forster gives him surprising depth and genuine love for his child. The women, particularly Caroline, also reveal hidden strengths and complexities. It’s a story about the danger of thinking you're superior, and the painful, beautiful process of having your neat worldview shattered.
Final Verdict
Perfect for readers who love character-driven stories about culture clash and personal transformation. It’s a great introduction to Forster—shorter and more direct than Howards End or A Passage to India, but with the same brilliant insight into human nature. If you enjoyed the emotional dilemmas in novels by Jane Austen or the social observations in Edith Wharton's work, but want a plot with higher stakes and a Mediterranean backdrop, you'll devour this. Just be warned: it’s a quick read that leaves a long shadow.
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Carol Martin
1 year agoHonestly, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. A valuable addition to my collection.