“Genius…Each of the text’s 424 fragmentary entries exemplifies the wild, illogical path the mind takes on the way to getting a grip, or to losing one…Mainardi has crafted a masterly work in the best memoir tradition, placing emphasis less on what happened than on what he (and therefore we) can perceive because it happened.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Odd and enchanting…Paternal rage, fear, guilt, and joy suffuse every page…Any parent of a child with or without a disability will appreciate [The Fall‘s] eloquence.” —The Boston Globe
“A new way to think about imperfection, expectation, exaltation, and love.” —NPR, Weekend Edition Saturday
“Mainardi creates a particular journey into the universe of his mind, directed by his son.” —Publishers Weekly
“A heartbreaking, brain-expanding hymn of love by a father for his son.” —Oprah.com
“Masterfully written…A singularly compelling memoir.” —Kirkus (Starred review)
“Mainardi…picks the world up and erects it as a monument of meaning to his own son.” —Financial Times
“[I]ndelible…This poetic and unsentimental memoir shines with a father’s love and a child’s indomitable spirit.” —BBC.com
“Heartbreaking, astonishing and wise, Mainardi’s telling of Tito’s story is not to be missed.” —Book Reporter
“[O]riginal, defying common precepts of what the reader believes he is reading.” —CounterPunch Weekend Edition
“[A] beautiful book.” —Tweed’s Book Blog
“The Fall is a mercurial and enriching walk through ‘off-script’ fatherhood, cerebral palsy, art history, and this commonplace mystery, love. The Fall is wise and kind and moving.” —David Mitchell, best-selling author of Cloud Atlas
“A wise and unsentimental description of what it is like to be parent to a child with cerebral palsy—an episodic portrait of a very intimate paternal journey.” —Andrew Solomon, National Book Award–winning author of Far from the Tree and The Noonday Demon
“Fathering a disabled child, like the plaza outside the Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo to which Diogo Mainardi consistently returns, is uneven terrain. In The Fall, Mainardi traverses that terrain in 424 lucid, deeply arresting steps.” —Ron Suskind, Pultizer Prize–winning journalist and author of Life, Animated: A Story of Sidekicks, Heroes, and Autism.
“The Fall, Diogo Mainardi’s remarkable celebration of his son Tito, who was born with cerebral palsy because of a doctor’s negligence, is intensely moving, rational, literate, and an absolute joy to read from start to finish.” —John Berendt, New York Times best-selling author of Midnight In the Garden of Good and Evil and The City of Falling Angels
“The Fall is a moving portrait of a relationship with a child and a place. It is a rare book; by turns heartbreaking, angry, and lyrical.” —Edmund de Waal, author of The Hare with Amber Eyes
“[The Fall] will intrigue, delight and surprise you.” —BLOOM Blog
“The Fall connects the disparate, and what results is an artful collage of acceptance, growth and appreciation.” —Sacramento News & Reviews
“[E]nthralling…a stirring reminder of how much a fallacy ‘inferiority’ is.” —The Jersey Journal