What is relevant in the book and gives vivacity to the narration is the style of the expression, with a flowing narration, from which charac-ters and events take shape with a great realism. The style is swift and effective, and the characters stand out as if they were alive, evoked by an extraordinary emotional charge. The principle inspiring this work may echo after Paul Ricoeur who, in Time and Narrative, states: Life is a tale, not a theorem. Readers can emotionally relate to this novel because the facts narrated are naturally occurring events, seen and depicted with a child's perspective, a child who, as an adult, remem-bers those events with the same emotions felt in youth. The most im-portant merit of Luciano De Angelis' book lies specifically in this similarity between time and memory, in a narration that is both linear and graphic