top of page

Fri, Oct 21

|

Location will be emailed to guests

Italian Literature Book Group for October (Dante members only)

Start reading so we can discuss...

Registration is Closed
See other events
Italian Literature Book Group for October (Dante members only)
Italian Literature Book Group for October (Dante members only)

Time & Location

Oct 21, 2022, 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM

Location will be emailed to guests

Guests

About the Event

The focus of the book group is fiction and non-fiction; books written by Italian authors (in translation); books written by any author, set in Italy, and books about Italy. It’s a large set, but one book generally leads in the direction of the next, so we won’t feel discombobulated. The moderator of the book club is Connie Bertuca, former high school English teacher, lover of books and Italian travel, and perpetual Italian 2 student.

 📚 The October 2022 Book Selection  — Lily Tuck’s Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante

Dear readers,

I wanted to read Morante’s History, but it’s out of print and might be difficult to find. I’m settling for a biography of this remarkable, prickly, and not widely known outside-of-Italy writer in the hopes you might be prompted to dig in and find History and give it a go. Hope to see you in October!~ Connie

"Elsa Morante was born in 1912 to an unconventional family of modest means. She grew up with an independent spirit, a formidable will, and a commitment to writing—she wrote her first poem when she was just two years old. During World War II, Morante and her husband, the celebrated writer Alberto Moravia, were forced to flee occupied Rome—Moravia was half-Jewish (as was she) and wanted by the Fascists—and hide out in a remote mountain hut. After the war, Morante published a series of prize-winning novels, including Arturo's Island and History, a seminal account of the war, which established her as one of the leading Italian writers of her day. Lily Tuck's elegant and unusual biography also evokes the heady time during the postwar years when Rome was the film capital of the world and Morante's counted among her circle of friends the filmmakers Pier Paolo Pasolini, Luchino Visconti, and the young Bernardo Bertolucci. A charismatic and beautiful woman, Morante had a series of love affairs—most unhappy—as well as friendships with such famous literary luminaries as Carlo Levi, Italo Calvino, and Natalia Ginzburg. As a couple, Morante and Moravia—the Beauvoir-Sartre of Italy—captivated the nation with their intense and mutual admiration, their arguments, and their passion. Wonderfully researched with the cooperation of the Morante Estate, filled with personal interviews, and written in graceful and succinct prose, Woman of Rome introduces the American reader to a woman of fierce intelligence, powerful imagination, and original talent. " Goodreads

_______________________________________________________________

*the size of the group is limited to 10 members.  If you are not yet a paid member of Dante, sign-up here.  Now that we are beginning to meet in-person at someone's home (outside), everyone participating must be fully-vaccinated.  

Share This Event

bottom of page