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Oedipus Complex is a disambiguation


* OedipusComplex: Downplayed, but in many instances where Vittorio is alone with his mother, he describes her quite erotically...
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Dewicked trope
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* AdultFear: Your young child being bullied and physically attacked by his classmates for something ''you'' did.
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Capitalization was fixed from Literature.Livesofthe Saints to Literature.Lives Of The Saints. Null edit to update page.
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Ghost wick was fixed on Literature.Lives Of The Saints.
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No longer a trope.


* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.

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* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.
gaps.
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**Subverted in the sequel, "Where She Has Gone," when Vittorio returns to his village and realizes she looked far more plain than he remembered when he sees a picture of her.
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* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.

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* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.
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** In the sequel, "Where She Has Gone," it was revealed it was commonplace for wives of husbands who emigrated elsewhere for long stretches to have affairs that resulted in pregnancies. So much so that people would stumble upon dead babies abandoned in fields, and the Church created a system for women to anonymously leave their babies at a convent. Cristina’s “crime” wasn’t that she did something that many other women (and likely the men who emigrated ahead of their wives) were all doing. It was that she refused to hide her pregnancy because she was intent on keeping the baby.
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** Superstitious folk beliefs are common in the poor, remote parts of Italy. Some are holdovers from pre-Christian times as it's common everywhere for converts to bring some of their existing beliefs with them when they become Christians, creating localized brands of Christianity. Others develop over time as any superstitions do. As long as regional superstitions do not contradict important Christian tenants, the Church generally does not get involved in trying to stamp them out.

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moving from Literature/Lives_of_the_Saints


A page for this works doesn't exist yet. Press 'Edit' to start.

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A page [[quoteright:191:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lives_of_the_saints.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:191:some caption text]]

''Lives of the Saints'' is a drama novel written by Canadian author, Nino Ricci. It follows the life of six (almost seven) year old Vittorio "Vitto" Innocente and his mother, Cristina within the small Italian village of Valle del Sole. On a hot day on April 1956, Vitto runs into his mother having an affair with a blue-eyed man, despite being a married woman. Word of her affair reaches the other villagers, who are ultra religious, and she (and be extension, Vittorio) is immediately ostracized.

The novel is the first in the ''Lives of the Saints'' trilogy, the other two sequels being ''{{Literature/In a Glass House}}'', and ''{{Literature/Where She Has Gone}}''.

--

!!The book contains examples of

* AdultFear: Your young child being bullied and physically attacked by his classmates
for something ''you'' did.
* AnAesop: Be careful pointing out someone's wrongdoings while ignoring your own. Considering the religious themes in the book,
this works is a brilliant example of "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone."
* AnalogyBackfire: A meta example. Father Nicola gives a homily during Sunday mass about St. Cristina, a closet Christian woman who was tortured and martyred by the townsmen for her beliefs, on the orders of her father no less. It's made clear that this was meant to parallel Cristina Innocente's life, and the priest attempting to calm down the villagers' scrutiny of her. However this is a somewhat poor analogy, as St.Cristina was following God's commands, while our Cristina was breaking the Christian law regarding extra-marital affairs.
* ArtisticLicenseReligion: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.
* BigWhat: Cristina's reaction when her best friend Giuseppina urges her to sacrifice a chicken to lift the curse off of her [Cristina] and her family resulting from her affair.
* BittersweetEnding: Vittorio successfully lands in [[spoiler: Canada, as opposed to America.]] But on the other hand, he left as a social outcast by the people he's known all his life, he is forced to leave behind his only friend, [[spoiler: Cristina is dead after giving birth]], and now he has landed in a new country with [[spoiler: a baby in arms]] to be taken back into the care of his abusive father.
* BookDumb: Vittorio's best friend, Fabrizio qualifies, as such that his father pulls him out of school to keep him working on the fields full-time. Though judging from a few casual mentions, one can speculate that Fabrizio's academic ineptness is a result of his father beating him for most of his life.
** Subverted with Vittorio. ''La maestra'' sometime before the events of the book says to Cristina that he is 'intelligent but lazy'. And indeed this is the case, as after ''la maestra'' takes him under her wing during his bullying period, he is sufficiently motivated to take his books home and study, thus resulting in high grades that make him become one of ''la maestra's'' star students.
* BrokenAesop: The book attempts to portray Cristina as a woman with a feminist mindset that defies cultural norms. However, it's kind of hard to sympathize with her when her idea of defying social norms involves cheating on her husband. Partly justified though, as her husband is a domestic abuser, and divorce was a rare thing to accomplish back in the 50s.
* ChildrenAreInnocent: A major theme in the book. Through Vittorio's first-person narration, we are able to see how some of the villagers are beginning to treat him poorly as a result of his mother's infidelity, but because he is only seven at the time, he
doesn't exist yet. Press 'Edit' understand ''why'' people are mistreating him.
** Subverted by the other village children in a form of KidsAreCruel, particularly Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not
to start.speak with Vittorio, and were possibly encouraged to do bully him. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.
* DeathByChildbirth: [[spoiler: Cristina bleeds to death just hours after giving birth to Rita.]]
* DefrostingIceQueen: ''La maestra'', who begins to go soft on Vittorio halfway through the book when she notices his the other students cruelly bullying over Cristina's affair.
* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.
* DissonantSerenity: Vittorio visibly freaks out at the hospital where his mom is being treated for a snake bite, believing that she's dead. At the very end of the book when [[spoiler: Cristina dies for real]], he reacts with DullSurprise, and continues with the SceneryPorn.
* DomesticAbuse: Vittorio's father, Mario, was physically abusive towards both him and Cristina. His leaving to America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]], was seen as a blessing to both.
** Mario's abuse toward Cristina serves as her FreudianExcuse for cheating on him while he was away.
* DoubleMeaningTitle: In its literal form, ''Lives of the Saints'' refers to the book that la maestra gives to Vittorio as a parting gift. In its figurative form, it's a brilliant case of an in-universe TakeThat to the Valle del Sole villagers, who believe Cristina to be the vilest sinner to ever live, while ignoring the fact that even ''they'' don't exactly live such saintly lives either.
* DoubleStandard: Invoked by Cristina, who questions as to why her father and the villagers villainize her for having an affair when there's the possibility that her husband Mario, who's alone in America, could very well be doing the same thing. Her father responds by [[InsaneTrollLogic calling her a communist]].
* DullSurprise: From Vittorio's less-than-flattering description of ''everything'' going on throughout the book, he likely has this attitude.
* GetOut: Cristina's fathers furious last words to her when she announces her intention to go to "America" to catch up with Mario. ''Lo pudesta'' practically bans his daughter from entering his house ever again (though permitting his grandson to return whenever he wishes), and states his intention to pray every night for Cristina to burn in Hell. Nice father.
* GoodBadGirl: Even though Cristina engages in extra marital sex and deviates from many of her village's traditions, she's still a devout Catholic as some pages show.
* InformedAttractiveness: Cristina is considered to be one of the most beautiful women in the village, even from a young age.
* {{Jerkass}}: Almost everyone, minor characters included, fit this trope nicely.
** Vittorio is quite prone to being rude to other people for ''absolutely no reason'', even when some go out of their way to be nice to him (the only exception being ''la maestra'', but Vittorio knew that he it was in his best interest to stay on good terms with the only person who can protect him from getting beaten up after school).
** Cristina herself, though hers is downplayed to being more of a snob. She easily loses her temper with everyone, even when they do speak kindly to her. Justified though, as she ''is'' being treated like dirt by almost everyone, save for her son and her close male friend, Luciano. So really, she's within her right here.
** Cristina's father, who is prone to angry fits when faced with any inconvenience. He starts out as the mayor ("lo pudesta") of Valle del Sole, and as such shows far more concern for his social status than for his daughter's well-being. It only gets worse later on when he is pressured to resign from his position when Cristina's scandal gets too strong.
* KarmaHoudini: The blue-eyed man never gets any comeuppance for practically ruining a family's life by having an affair with a married woman, making her a social outcast, impregnating her with his child, which [[spoiler: kills her]], and effectively leaving Vittorio all alone in a foreign land with [[spoiler: a baby he's unable to look after.]] Though he does have small shades of TheAtoner to him, as he is seen visiting Vittorio in the infirmary after he's passed out during [[spoiler: Cristina's funeral]].
** Vittorio's classmates seemingly escape punishment for bullying Vittorio. The only classmate to get ''some'' form of comeuppance is Alfredo, who gets the scare of his life when Cristina breaks into house threatening to kill his mother if she ever catches him bullying Vittorio ever again.
** The ferry's doctor practically scraps the Hippocratic oath by immediately abandoning Cristina mere minutes after she gave birth without trying to stop the bleeding, which [[spoiler: results in Cristina bleeding to death sometime later.]] He did this all because he didn't like Cristina's high-and-mighty attitude. Had this happened today, not only would he have been stripped of his licence, but he would be found criminally guilty in [[spoiler: abandoning a patient to die.]]
* LiteralBastard: [[spoiler: Cristina's baby.]]
* MeaningfulName: Vittorio's last name 'Innocente' is supposed to emphasize his childhood innocence and naivety while living in an unkind world.
* OedipusComplex: Downplayed, but in many instances where Vittorio is alone with his mother, he describes her quite erotically...
* ReallyGetsAround: Implied with Cristina. Even though we only see her have an affair with one man, she acts quite coquette with other men in the book. And if Vittorio is to be believed, Cristina likely had other men in her house over the years.
* RuleOfSymbolism: The colour blue which represents Cristina's blue-eyed lover, and eggs that symbolize birth. These two combined (as shown in Vitto's PropheticDream) symbolize and foreshadow [[spoiler: Rita's birth.]]
** The lucky ''lira'' that was given to him by Luciano symbolizes his good luck. It eventually slides out of the ship into the ocean shortly after [[spoiler: Cristina's death]], symbolizing Vittorio's luck leaving him altogether.
* ScenaryPorn: If you take away Cristina's story plot, the entire book would be about Vittorio describing the scenary around him. Said descriptions would either sound peaceful to some readers, or be considered a bunch of InfoDump by others who might see it as irrelevant to the plot.
* SinsOfTheFather: Or rather, sins of the ''mother''. Vittorio is bullied by the village children when word of his mother's affair gets out.
* SternTeacher: La maestra is initially thought to be a cruel teacher by her students, especially by Vittorio and Fabrizio. From readers' perspective, it's obvious that she's only concerned for her students' education, and yet she's never seen applying corporal punishment on them despite the practice being legal in the 50s. It isn't until after Vittorio suffers from bullying that he begins to see her as a ReasonableAuthorityFigure.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: As Cristina and Vittorio are about to get into a taxi to leave the village permanently, she delivers one of these to the onlooking villagers, calling them out on their backwards superstitions and the pure stupidity of them ostracizing her and her family as a result of those supersititions.
* TroublingUnchildlikeBehaviour: Vittorio and his best friend Fabrizio, both seven and eight years old respectively, ocassionally smoke cigarettes in their free time.
* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.

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[[quoteright:191:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lives_of_the_saints.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:191:some caption text]]

''Lives of the Saints'' is a drama novel written by Canadian author, Nino Ricci. It follows the life of six (almost seven) year old Vittorio "Vitto" Innocente and his mother, Cristina within the small Italian village of Valle del Sole. On a hot day on April 1956, Vitto runs into his mother having an affair with a blue-eyed man, despite being a married woman. Word of her affair reaches the other villagers, who are ultra religious, and she (and be extension, Vittorio) is immediately ostracized.

The novel is the first in the ''Lives of the Saints'' trilogy, the other two sequels being ''In a Glass House'', and ''Where She Has Gone''.

--

!!The book contains examples of

* AdultFear: Your young child being bullied and physically attacked by his classmates for something ''you'' did.
* AnAesop: Be careful pointing out someone's wrongdoings while ignoring your own. Considering the religious themes in the book, this is a brilliant example of "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone."
** And possibly, never, ever punish children for their parents' wrongdoings.
* ArtisticLicenseReligion: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.
* BastardChild: Rita.
* BigWhat: Cristina's reaction when her best friend Giuseppina urges her to sacrifice a chicken to lift the curse off of her [Cristina] and her family resulting from her affair.
* BrokenAesop: The book attempts to portray Cristina as a woman with a feminist mindset that defies cultural norms. However, it's kind of hard to sympathize with her when her idea of defying social norms involves cheating on her husband. Partly justified though, as her husband is a domestic abuser, and divorce was a rare thing to accomplish back in the 50s.
* ChildrenAreInnocent: A major theme in the book. Through Vittorio's first-person narration, we are able to see how some of the villagers are beginning to treat him poorly as a result of his mother's infidelity, but because he is only seven at the time, he doesn't understand ''why'' people are mistreating him.
** Subverted by the other village children, particularly Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly encouraged to do bully him. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.
* DeathByChildbirth: [[spoiler: Cristina bleeds to death just hours after giving birth to Rita.]]
* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.
* DomesticAbuse: Vittorio's father, Mario, was physically abusive towards both him and Cristina. His leaving to America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]], was seen as a blessing to both.
** Mario's abuse toward Cristina serves as her FreudianExcuse for cheating on him while he was away.
* DoubleMeaningTitle: In its literal form, ''Lives of the Saints'' refers to the book that la maestra gives to Vittorio as a parting gift. In its figurative form, it's a brilliant case of an in-universe TakeThat to the Valle del Sole villagers, who believe Cristina to be the vilest sinner to ever live, while ignoring the fact that even ''they'' don't exactly live such saintly lives either.
* InformedAttractiveness: Cristina is considered to be one of the most beautiful women in the village, even from a young age.
* KarmaHoudini: The blue-eyed man never gets any comeuppance for practically ruining a family's life by having an affair with a married woman, making her a social outcast, impregnating her with his child, which [[spoiler: kills her]], and effectively leaving Vittorio all alone in a foreign land with [[spoiler: a baby he's unable to look after.]]
** Vittorio's classmates seemingly escape punishment for bullying Vittorio. The only classmate to get ''some'' form of comeuppance is Alfredo, who gets the scare of his life when Cristina breaks into house threatening to kill his mother if she ever catches him bullying Vittorio ever again.
* MeaningfulName: Vittorio's last name 'Innocente' is supposed to emphasize his childhood innocence in a cruel world.
* OedipusComplex: Downplayed, but in many instances where Vittorio is alone with his mother, he describes her quite erotically...
* ReallyGetsAround: Implied with Cristina. Even though we only see her have an affair with one man, she acts quite coquette with other men in the book. And if Vittorio is to be believed, Cristina likely had other men in her house over the years.
* RuleOfSymbolism: The colour blue which represents Cristina's blue-eyed lover, and eggs that symbolize birth. These two combined (as shown in Vitto's PropheticDream) symbolize and foreshadow [[spoiler: Rita's birth.]]
* TroublingUnchildlikeBehaviour: Vittorio and his best friend Fabrizio, both seven and eight years old respectively, ocassionally smoke cigarettes in their free time.
* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.

to:

[[quoteright:191:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lives_of_the_saints.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:191:some caption text]]

''Lives of the Saints'' is a drama novel written by Canadian author, Nino Ricci. It follows the life of six (almost seven) year old Vittorio "Vitto" Innocente and his mother, Cristina within the small Italian village of Valle del Sole. On a hot day on April 1956, Vitto runs into his mother having an affair with a blue-eyed man, despite being a married woman. Word of her affair reaches the other villagers, who are ultra religious, and she (and be extension, Vittorio) is immediately ostracized.

The novel is the first in the ''Lives of the Saints'' trilogy, the other two sequels being ''In a Glass House'', and ''Where She Has Gone''.

--

!!The book contains examples of

* AdultFear: Your young child being bullied and physically attacked by his classmates
A page for something ''you'' did.
* AnAesop: Be careful pointing out someone's wrongdoings while ignoring your own. Considering the religious themes in the book,
this is a brilliant example of "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone."
** And possibly, never, ever punish children for their parents' wrongdoings.
* ArtisticLicenseReligion: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.
* BastardChild: Rita.
* BigWhat: Cristina's reaction when her best friend Giuseppina urges her to sacrifice a chicken to lift the curse off of her [Cristina] and her family resulting from her affair.
* BrokenAesop: The book attempts to portray Cristina as a woman with a feminist mindset that defies cultural norms. However, it's kind of hard to sympathize with her when her idea of defying social norms involves cheating on her husband. Partly justified though, as her husband is a domestic abuser, and divorce was a rare thing to accomplish back in the 50s.
* ChildrenAreInnocent: A major theme in the book. Through Vittorio's first-person narration, we are able to see how some of the villagers are beginning to treat him poorly as a result of his mother's infidelity, but because he is only seven at the time, he
works doesn't understand ''why'' people are mistreating him.
** Subverted by the other village children, particularly Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not
exist yet. Press 'Edit' to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly encouraged to do bully him. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.
* DeathByChildbirth: [[spoiler: Cristina bleeds to death just hours after giving birth to Rita.]]
* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.
* DomesticAbuse: Vittorio's father, Mario, was physically abusive towards both him and Cristina. His leaving to America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]], was seen as a blessing to both.
** Mario's abuse toward Cristina serves as her FreudianExcuse for cheating on him while he was away.
* DoubleMeaningTitle: In its literal form, ''Lives of the Saints'' refers to the book that la maestra gives to Vittorio as a parting gift. In its figurative form, it's a brilliant case of an in-universe TakeThat to the Valle del Sole villagers, who believe Cristina to be the vilest sinner to ever live, while ignoring the fact that even ''they'' don't exactly live such saintly lives either.
* InformedAttractiveness: Cristina is considered to be one of the most beautiful women in the village, even from a young age.
* KarmaHoudini: The blue-eyed man never gets any comeuppance for practically ruining a family's life by having an affair with a married woman, making her a social outcast, impregnating her with his child, which [[spoiler: kills her]], and effectively leaving Vittorio all alone in a foreign land with [[spoiler: a baby he's unable to look after.]]
** Vittorio's classmates seemingly escape punishment for bullying Vittorio. The only classmate to get ''some'' form of comeuppance is Alfredo, who gets the scare of his life when Cristina breaks into house threatening to kill his mother if she ever catches him bullying Vittorio ever again.
* MeaningfulName: Vittorio's last name 'Innocente' is supposed to emphasize his childhood innocence in a cruel world.
* OedipusComplex: Downplayed, but in many instances where Vittorio is alone with his mother, he describes her quite erotically...
* ReallyGetsAround: Implied with Cristina. Even though we only see her have an affair with one man, she acts quite coquette with other men in the book. And if Vittorio is to be believed, Cristina likely had other men in her house over the years.
* RuleOfSymbolism: The colour blue which represents Cristina's blue-eyed lover, and eggs that symbolize birth. These two combined (as shown in Vitto's PropheticDream) symbolize and foreshadow [[spoiler: Rita's birth.]]
* TroublingUnchildlikeBehaviour: Vittorio and his best friend Fabrizio, both seven and eight years old respectively, ocassionally smoke cigarettes in their free time.
* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.
start.
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Added DiffLines:

* AnAesop: Be careful pointing out someone's wrongdoings while ignoring your own. Considering the religious themes in the book, this is a brilliant example of "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone."
** And possibly, never, ever punish children for their parents' wrongdoings.


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* BrokenAesop: The book attempts to portray Cristina as a woman with a feminist mindset that defies cultural norms. However, it's kind of hard to sympathize with her when her idea of defying social norms involves cheating on her husband. Partly justified though, as her husband is a domestic abuser, and divorce was a rare thing to accomplish back in the 50s.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* BastardChild: Rita.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* DoubleMeaningTitle: In its literal form, ''Lives of the Saints'' refers to the book that la maestra gives to Vittorio as a parting gift. In its figurative form, it's a brilliant case of an in-universe TakeThat to the Valle del Sole villagers, who believe Cristina to be the vilest sinner to ever live, while ignoring the fact that even ''they'' don't exactly live such saintly lives either.

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* AdultFear: Your young child being bullied and physically attacked by his classmates for something ''you'' did.



** Subverted by the other village children, particularly Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly endcouraged to do so. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.

to:

** Subverted by the other village children, particularly Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly endcouraged encouraged to do so.bully him. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.


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* DisappearedDad: Mario Innocente left for America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]] to when Vittorio was three in order to pave the way for his family to have a better life. Cristina isn't gigging for it though.


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* KarmaHoudini: The blue-eyed man never gets any comeuppance for practically ruining a family's life by having an affair with a married woman, making her a social outcast, impregnating her with his child, which [[spoiler: kills her]], and effectively leaving Vittorio all alone in a foreign land with [[spoiler: a baby he's unable to look after.]]
** Vittorio's classmates seemingly escape punishment for bullying Vittorio. The only classmate to get ''some'' form of comeuppance is Alfredo, who gets the scare of his life when Cristina breaks into house threatening to kill his mother if she ever catches him bullying Vittorio ever again.
* MeaningfulName: Vittorio's last name 'Innocente' is supposed to emphasize his childhood innocence in a cruel world.


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* ReallyGetsAround: Implied with Cristina. Even though we only see her have an affair with one man, she acts quite coquette with other men in the book. And if Vittorio is to be believed, Cristina likely had other men in her house over the years.
* RuleOfSymbolism: The colour blue which represents Cristina's blue-eyed lover, and eggs that symbolize birth. These two combined (as shown in Vitto's PropheticDream) symbolize and foreshadow [[spoiler: Rita's birth.]]

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Removed: 71

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* ArtisticLicenseChristianity: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.

to:

* ArtisticLicenseChristianity: ArtisticLicenseReligion: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.



** Subverted by the other village children, particularly VIttorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly endcouraged to do so. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.

to:

** Subverted by the other village children, particularly VIttorio's Vittorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly endcouraged to do so. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.



* ThyCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.



* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.

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* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.gaps.
* YourCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.
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[[quoteright:191:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lives_of_the_saints.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:191:some caption text]]

''Lives of the Saints'' is a drama novel written by Canadian author, Nino Ricci. It follows the life of six (almost seven) year old Vittorio "Vitto" Innocente and his mother, Cristina within the small Italian village of Valle del Sole. On a hot day on April 1956, Vitto runs into his mother having an affair with a blue-eyed man, despite being a married woman. Word of her affair reaches the other villagers, who are ultra religious, and she (and be extension, Vittorio) is immediately ostracized.

The novel is the first in the ''Lives of the Saints'' trilogy, the other two sequels being ''In a Glass House'', and ''Where She Has Gone''.

--

!!The book contains examples of

* ArtisticLicenseChristianity: The villagers continuously use the snake bite as solid proof of Cristina's infidelity (not that they're wrong, but sometimes a snake bite is just a snake bite). They have an entire system on what snake bites symbolize based on its size, colour, and from which direction it came from, and whether the snake's victim has sinned against God. The thing is, it's made abundantly clear from the beginning that Valle del Sole is a Catholic village, and Catholics go by the Bible. Outside of the Book of Genesis, there is no other mention of snakes, not even in Church supplementary material, so the villagers' strongly-held snake beliefs are non-canon rhetoric. Where they came up with this system of snakes is left unknown.
* BigWhat: Cristina's reaction when her best friend Giuseppina urges her to sacrifice a chicken to lift the curse off of her [Cristina] and her family resulting from her affair.
* ChildrenAreInnocent: A major theme in the book. Through Vittorio's first-person narration, we are able to see how some of the villagers are beginning to treat him poorly as a result of his mother's infidelity, but because he is only seven at the time, he doesn't understand ''why'' people are mistreating him.
** Subverted by the other village children, particularly VIttorio's classmates who continuously bully him over Cristina. Possibly justified, as they knew of Cristina's affair from ''their'' parents, who most certainly ordered them not to speak with Vittorio, and were possibly endcouraged to do so. This an example of the flip side of children not knowing any better.
* DeathByChildbirth: [[spoiler: Cristina bleeds to death just hours after giving birth to Rita.]]
* DomesticAbuse: Vittorio's father, Mario, was physically abusive towards both him and Cristina. His leaving to America [[spoiler: (actually Canada)]], was seen as a blessing to both.
** Mario's abuse toward Cristina serves as her FreudianExcuse for cheating on him while he was away.
* InformedAttractiveness: Cristina is considered to be one of the most beautiful women in the village, even from a young age.
* OedipusComplex: Downplayed, but in many instances where Vittorio is alone with his mother, he describes her quite erotically...
* ThyCheatingHeart: The trope Cristina commits that kicks off the plot.
* TroublingUnchildlikeBehaviour: Vittorio and his best friend Fabrizio, both seven and eight years old respectively, ocassionally smoke cigarettes in their free time.
* UnreliableNarrator: Vittorio being a small child means that he isn't able to fully interpret the events around him. Ocassionally readers to fill in the gaps.

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