Sometimes You Have to Get Lost to Find Yourself
Mark Anello thought he had it all figured out, but life had other plans. At 34, the suburban math teacher is unceremoniously dumped by his stand-up comedian boyfriend, leaving him feeling stuck and uninspired in Los Angeles. Desperate for a change, Mark flees to San Francisco, where he encounters Alessandro, a charming but disillusioned Italian tourist trapped in a loveless relationship. Their connection is immediate, and after months of long-distance emails, Mark follows his heart to Rome.
But love doesn't come easy. After three passionate summers together, Mark begins to sense Alessandro slipping away, embarking on new adventures while Mark is left to question everything. Left high and dry in a foreign country, heartbroken and alone, Mark stumbles into a new worlda seductive, high-stakes scene of neo-Bohemians, aristocrats, and avant-garde artists. Yet beneath the glamorous surface lurks a darker reality: a dangerous web of drugs, lust, and even murder in the elite European art circles.
On the brink of destruction, Mark must navigate his way through the chaos to discover a new sense of self. As the world begins to heal from a global pandemic, he returns home transformedarmed with the hard-earned wisdom to embrace love on his own terms, let go of what no longer serves him, and face the future with clarity and compassion.
Praise for Where the Nights Smell Like Bread
"If you think Henry James had the last word in American-European relationships, you've not read Glen Peters' sweepingly romantic and realistically detailed Where the Nights Smell Like Bread. This propulsive, superbly written first novel is an exciting tour guide and a daunting gay romance primer on the varieties of Old World disturbia, where first impressions are anything but true." Felice Picano, author of Ambidextrous: The Secret Lives of Children
"This sexy, sad, life-affirming story of love, friends, and family found when you least intend, will make you nostalgic for lost love, hungry for sensual pleasures, yet glad you're old and out of the game...but not necessarily in that order." Sara Marchant, author of Becoming Delilah and Essential Planner for my Mother's Huge Cult Following
"Where the Nights Smell Like Bread sweeps us along with narrative power. Glen Peters' vividly drawn characters discover that they can't escape the twists and turns of modern life whether they're in Los Angeles, Madrid, or a small Italian mountain village. At the same time, they also experience the joys of family, whether born into, made, or found. Touching, compelling, and true, this book and especially the narrator Markwho will come alive and linger in your heart and mind." Georgia Hughes, editorial director,New World Library
"A moving story of love lost and found, unfolding during adventures in Europe and under the encroaching shadow of the pandemic. Glen Peters' writing is lyrical and haunting, as he explores one man's journey to create a meaningful life." Emily Dwass, author of Diagnosis Female: How Medical Bias Endangers Women's Health
"A classic verse by Hafez translates, "The story of love is all but one, yet each time I hear one, it sounds unrepeated!" Glen Peters' new novel, Where the Nights Smell Like Bread, is indeed a fresh story of love as it opens new doors that the reader may not even know existed. I finished it in just a few days and found it unlike any story I have ever read. The narrator remains objective throughout, but tender emotions are palpable on every page." Zoe Ghahremani, author of Sky of Red Poppies (San Diego Book-of-the-Month)
Mark Anello thought he had it all figured out, but life had other plans. At 34, the suburban math teacher is unceremoniously dumped by his stand-up comedian boyfriend, leaving him feeling stuck and uninspired in Los Angeles. Desperate for a change, Mark flees to San Francisco, where he encounters Alessandro, a charming but disillusioned Italian tourist trapped in a loveless relationship. Their connection is immediate, and after months of long-distance emails, Mark follows his heart to Rome.
But love doesn't come easy. After three passionate summers together, Mark begins to sense Alessandro slipping away, embarking on new adventures while Mark is left to question everything. Left high and dry in a foreign country, heartbroken and alone, Mark stumbles into a new worlda seductive, high-stakes scene of neo-Bohemians, aristocrats, and avant-garde artists. Yet beneath the glamorous surface lurks a darker reality: a dangerous web of drugs, lust, and even murder in the elite European art circles.
On the brink of destruction, Mark must navigate his way through the chaos to discover a new sense of self. As the world begins to heal from a global pandemic, he returns home transformedarmed with the hard-earned wisdom to embrace love on his own terms, let go of what no longer serves him, and face the future with clarity and compassion.
Praise for Where the Nights Smell Like Bread
"If you think Henry James had the last word in American-European relationships, you've not read Glen Peters' sweepingly romantic and realistically detailed Where the Nights Smell Like Bread. This propulsive, superbly written first novel is an exciting tour guide and a daunting gay romance primer on the varieties of Old World disturbia, where first impressions are anything but true." Felice Picano, author of Ambidextrous: The Secret Lives of Children
"This sexy, sad, life-affirming story of love, friends, and family found when you least intend, will make you nostalgic for lost love, hungry for sensual pleasures, yet glad you're old and out of the game...but not necessarily in that order." Sara Marchant, author of Becoming Delilah and Essential Planner for my Mother's Huge Cult Following
"Where the Nights Smell Like Bread sweeps us along with narrative power. Glen Peters' vividly drawn characters discover that they can't escape the twists and turns of modern life whether they're in Los Angeles, Madrid, or a small Italian mountain village. At the same time, they also experience the joys of family, whether born into, made, or found. Touching, compelling, and true, this book and especially the narrator Markwho will come alive and linger in your heart and mind." Georgia Hughes, editorial director,New World Library
"A moving story of love lost and found, unfolding during adventures in Europe and under the encroaching shadow of the pandemic. Glen Peters' writing is lyrical and haunting, as he explores one man's journey to create a meaningful life." Emily Dwass, author of Diagnosis Female: How Medical Bias Endangers Women's Health
"A classic verse by Hafez translates, "The story of love is all but one, yet each time I hear one, it sounds unrepeated!" Glen Peters' new novel, Where the Nights Smell Like Bread, is indeed a fresh story of love as it opens new doors that the reader may not even know existed. I finished it in just a few days and found it unlike any story I have ever read. The narrator remains objective throughout, but tender emotions are palpable on every page." Zoe Ghahremani, author of Sky of Red Poppies (San Diego Book-of-the-Month)
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