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  1. Plot Summary. Richard Russo's novel Bridge of Sighs is an exploration of various characters from a fictional small-town in upstate New York who are reunited after many years in Venice to write their town's history. Based on the author's own experiences growing up in the factory town of Gloversville, NY, Russo explores the lasting impact of ...

  2. Sep 25, 2007 · Book Summary. Bridge of Sighs courses with small-town rhythms and the claims of family. Here is a town, as well as a world, defined by magnificent and nearly devastating contradictions. Louis Charles (“Lucy”) Lynch has spent all his sixty years in upstate Thomaston, New York, married to the same woman, Sarah, for forty of them, their son ...

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  3. "Bridge of Sighs" by Richard Russo is a compelling novel that delves into the complexities of small-town life, family dynamics, and the pursuit of the American dream. Set in the fictional town of Thomaston, New York, the story follows the lives of various characters as they navigate love, loss, and the passage of time.

  4. Sep 25, 2007 · Bridge of Sighs, also set in a small town, aims higher and sometimes (but not always) succeeds. 2. Bridge of Sighs, a fairly long book (642 pages), interweaves many characters and multiple generations. Russo is particularly strong with secrets and the ways in which individuals discover their own truths over longer periods of time.

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  5. Bridge of Sighs is not set solely in Thomaston. Part of this story unfolds in Venice, Italy. It is here that Bobby Noonan, a school friend of Lucy’s, goes to get away from his family and ...

  6. 978-0679753339. Dewey Decimal. 813/.54. LC Class. PS3568.U812 B75 2007. Bridge of Sighs is a 2007 novel written by American author Richard Russo. [1][2] The book centers on small-town life in Upstate New York, similar to other novels published by Russo. It was published by Alfred A. Knopf to favorable reviews.

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  8. Sep 25, 2007 · The Bridge of Sighs, located in Venice, Italy, is several thousand miles from his favorite haunts. Constructed in the 16th century, the Bridge of Sighs crossed the Rio di Palazzo and connected the interrogation rooms of Venetian police with the prisons. In the 19th century Lord Byron gave the bridge its famous name by suggesting that inmates ...

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