- Bancarella Literary Award, is an Italian prize born in 1953. It is celebrated every year in the town of Pontremoli, in the province of Massa Carrara, Tuscany. It is a prize established by Italian booksellers who chose the best one out of a selection of six novels. The lucky winner is announced in the penultimate Saturday or Sunday of July. The short list contains six novels all written in Italian by Italian writers or literary translations from foreign writers. Over the years, the award was given to well know International writers such as Hemingway for The Old Man and the Sea" (1953), Boris Pasternak for "Doctor Zhivago " (1958), John Grisham, Umberto Eco and Elizabeth Strout. This year the winner will announced on July 16th. The novels from the short list are: "Il giardino dei fiori segreti" by Cristina Caboni, published in October 2016; "La locanda dell'ultima solutudine" by Alessandro Barbaglia, published in January 2016; "Gocce di veleno" by Valeria Benatti, published in September 2016; "Magari domani resto" by Lorenzo Marone, published in January 2017, "I medici una dinastia al potere " published in October 2016. This list also contains a Japanese writer Yung-Myung Lee and the Italian translation of his novel "La guardia, il poeta e l'investigatore " published in Italy in January 2016. This last novel was also translated into English under the title "The Investigation " published in 2015.
mercoledì 14 giugno 2017
venerdì 13 gennaio 2017
GREAT STORIES BY CHEKHOV
Thank you NetGalley and
Dover Pubblications for giving me the opportunity to read this
beautiful collection of short stories by Checkov. It's a collection
to be published in January 2017 and translated by Constance Garnett,
who actually translated most of the classical literary productions of
Russian literature.
Whenever we think of Russian
literature, we think of words like "hopelessness",
"despair", and "dark"; but I can think of only
two words when it comes to it "amazing" and "truthful".
Despite his blunt and to the point writing, Checkov will always stand
out for his concise messages and beautiful descriptions of characters
and places. His style can easily be described as Impressionist.
Impressionism as a movement was based on capturing a subjective
experience rather than the realistic description of it. Checkov does
not give too many details in his stories and leaves us as readers to
peace the story together from his hints. As a reading audience we
totally depend upon the appearances and actions of the characters.
Each story is told through the characters' actions, movements and
thoughts. If the action becomes confusing sometimes, it's because the
characters are confused too. By the way of telling the story, we as
readers become caught up in the plot as if it were happening to us
right then and there.
Some critics described his
stories "short and sweet". They may be short in length but
they make up for the content. Checkov describes the characters in
such a way that the audience already knew them. Checkov's writing
style is so wonderful because of that. It make us connect with the
charactes, bad or good, and he does that in such a beautil way.
I totally recommend this
short collection of stories for all of you who love Russian
literature and short stories.
sabato 31 dicembre 2016
My personal thoughts of Dracula by Bram Stoker
I have a
confession to make, this is the second time I read this story. The
first time I read it was back in 2002 or 2003 (again in winter) and I
remember being overwhelmed by it. I've always related this novel to
those winter cozy readings, maybe because of the beautiful winter
descriptions of Transylvania presented by Stoker. I started reading
the novel and listening to the audiobook at the same time, but at
some point I gave up on the audio thing. Overall though, there are
definitely lots of things I liked about this novel. I liked the
epistolary format in the use of letters, diaries , memoranda, ship's
log and newspaper articles. It also provides multiple points of view
from a multitude of characters. The descriptions of characters and
places are wonderful and this makes it a turning page novel.
However, there are also some weak points. For example, the newspaper
articles are not very convincing and the use of the melodramatic long
speeches just made me collapse. More than once I found myself wishing
they would stop talking and just get on with it.
Although I
wasn't properly terrified of Dracula, I did find the narrative quite
suspenseful, or at least I thought I did until towards the end of the
novel. The climax when it finally came, it was over in a flash.
Overall,
this was lots of fun. It hasn't exactly converted me to vampire
fandom, although I'm thinking about reading its predecessors,
Sheridan Le Fanu's "Carmilla"
and
John Polidori's
"The Vampire Tale.". Not
anytime soon, though. For now I'll happily go back to avoidng horror.
sabato 5 novembre 2016
"Autumn" by Ali Smith
This is going to be one of my favorite books of the this year. This book is for book lovers, for people who love stories. There is a lot of intertextuality as well as it's a good story on its own. Ali always sets her novels in the present, but history transcends the story. So if we talk about a present, we also talk about everything that came until now and how we got to be and to live in this now. “Time travel is real, Daniel said. We do it all the time. Moment to moment, minute to minute.” In this novel we focus on two main characters: Daniel Gluck and Elisabeth Demand, which are both such great names. We start with Daniel being washed up on the shore on an island. The first line of the book is: “It was the worst of times, it was the worst of times”. So we open with this rephrasing of Dickens and also as we move forward through this chapter we get an image of Shakespeare as well. If we think of someone being washed up on an island, we think of plays like “The Tempest” or “The 12th night”. We begin this novel with links to other books, and by this Ali Smith is showing us that books cannot exist on their own, they exist with regard to everything that has come before them. This is a theme that goes throughout the entire novel and it's about Daniel who teaches Elisabeth about the origins of words and how words were invented to suit our purposes throughout time and history. The beginning of the book is also a reference to another well known character and that is Peter Pan. Peter Pan and the timelesness of the island and of the children living there. Ali idealizes the idea of childhood and by going back to the past, we go back to a state of innocence, thus this obsession of youth, another current theme in the book. When Daniel meets Elisabeth he is 80 and she is about 8. He likes to tell her stories about the origins of words like Humpty Dumpty. We have so many references to literature and classic novels, in this case “Alice in Wonderland”, that are woven throughout the entire novel. Another current theme is about changing identities and discovering new identities. In this novel we do not know how the characters look like. So, therefore, it's up to the reader to build up the characters' identity. However, we find these nods related to the characters that make us think how they really look like. The ambiguity of being black or white, between being English or a foreigner is so subtle in this book.
domenica 28 agosto 2016
giovedì 9 giugno 2016
Reading The Vegetarian by Han Kang, Man Booker International Prize 2016
The
Vegetarian by Han Kang
Han
Kang is a South Korean writer. She was born in a family of writers
and novelists, her brother and brother being also writers. Her novels
The Vegetarian and Human Acts are her first translated
works in English by Deborah Smith. In 2016 her novel The
Vegetarian won Man Booker International Prize and she is the
first Korean author to be nominated for the award.
§
This
book is so strange and weird at the same time. It's th first time I
am reading any Korean literature in translation, so I cannot judge it
too much. In short, it's
the story of a woman named Yeong-hye who decides to become a
vegetarian and how her family reacts to this decision. The novel is
divided into three parts, each told from the point of view of a
person who is impacted by her decision.
The
first part is narrated by her husband who describes her as plain
looking and who chose her because she was unremarkable in every
possible way. Then she suddenly had a dream. A rather bloody dream
that turn her away from meat and all animal products. In the second
part we see her through the eyes of her brother-in-law, an
unsuccessful video artist who struggles to create some vague
pornographic visions. He sees her in a total different way, an enigma
with a strong sense of self-posession and sexually attractive.
Finally, in the third part
we see her complete transformation, her struggle with mental illness
and how this affected her sister. In her sister's view she is
altogether a victim and a manipulator, a psychiatric patient who is
so capable of controlling
those around her.
It
is not a novel about becoming vegetarian. It is more about
obsessions, acting on obsessions and family relations. Despite being
a novel about Yeong-hye we never hearher perspective. It is also a
novel that makes you react against abuse, either physical or
psychological, family relations and societal norms. The writing is so
impactful and heartbreaking. So,
I'd say take 24 hours, read the novel and then make up your mind, is
it reasonable, provocative or it leaves you helpless?
lunedì 23 maggio 2016
Why
we should all be feminisits by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
This
is my first Adchie reading. It was such a great and fun read. A short
and effective essay on Feminism and gender and why it is so important
even today. If you download it on your kindle, it will take you about
half an hour to read it!
Adchie
was born in Nigeria in a family of six children. At 19 she leaves her
home to the USA to study Communication at
Drewel University in
Philadelphia. She is best known for her novels Purple Hibiscus
published in 2003 and nominated for The Man Booker Prize in 2004,
Americanah published in 2013 and Half a Yellow Sun
published in 2006.
This
essay is so perfectly written and presented in a simplistic manner
without any touch of negative humour thrown in to engage a live
audience. Adchie is part of the new wave of speakers making feminism
more accessible. A self proclaimed "happy feminist who does not
hate men, who likes lipstick, high heels for herself but not for
men", she adds a much needed touch of humour to the topic and
addresses the ridiculous stereotypes of a feminist.
She
presents male/female differences clearly. Her example of cooking fit
perfectly. Women are not born with a cooking gene and yet they are
expected to do so. Still, men are top chefs, making most of the
money. Evolution and culture? Male figures grow stronger and more
aggressive. And culture is the result of behaviors and beliefs that
describe a certain group. It's people who make culture and not the
other way around.
We
should all read this from highschool teenagers, University students,
adults, men and women. It should become an obligatory study part of
the curriculum. We should all be feminists.
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