Showing posts with label Italy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italy. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Relevant Literature in the Age of Coronavirus

I usually at least glance through my daily e-mail from Literary Hub and today noticed an item entitled "Italy's answer to the coronavirus is a classic published almost 200 years ago."  The book in question is "The Betrothed" by Alessandro Manzoni, a story that takes place when the plague has hit Italy.

The book ranks very high in the Italian literary canon and as the author of the LitHub article, Alessio Perrone, notes, has long been a subject for study in Italian schools.

Even if you don't intend to rush out and purchase a copy of the book, I recommend you read Perrone's excellent article about it and how the story relates to prevailing circumstances.  To read it, click on the phrase "excellent article" in the preceding sentence.


Tuesday, January 24, 2017

A Book to Read After Elena Ferrante's Neopolitan Quartet

If you have read and enjoyed one or more books of Elena Ferrante's Neopolitan Quartet -- it starts with "My Brilliant Friend" -- you might also like to read "Eva Sleeps" by Francesca Melandri.

The books of both authors were originally written in Italian, but the English translations are of high quality.

Whereas Ferrante's four novels examine slices of Italian post-World War II history and society from the point of view of blue-collar southern Italians, often looking north, Melandri's book covers much the same time period, but from a different perspective.  "Eva Sleeps" is set deep in the history of an alpine Italian province known as Alto Adige that was once part of Austria, when it was known as South Tyrol. There, except for a brief period when Hitler essentially ruled Italy, the residents -- mostly German speaking -- look south, often warily if not with outright hostility.