The novel begins with Costantino Ledda's conviction and sentencing for
the murder of his cruel uncle. Though innocent of the crime, he accepts
the guilty verdict as punishment for marrying Giovanna Era through a
civil ceremony rather than an expensive church wedding. When her husband
is taken away, Giovanna has no way to provide for herself, her mother,
and her son, who soon dies of malnutrition. Out of desperation she
divorces Costantino, according to a new law for wives of convicts, and
marries a wealthy but brutish landowner. When the true murderer
confesses and Costantino returns, he and Giovanna begin a forbidden and
ultimately destructive affair.
Deleda's tragic story of poverty, passion, and guilt portrays the
primitive and remote world of the church, pre-Christian superstitions,
and laws dictated from the mainland, in her native Sardinia, where
society hangs in a delicate balance. Once this order is disrupted, none
of these characters can escape the spiral of destruction dictated by
fate, God, and society.