Il sonaglio

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Il sonaglio

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Highlights

  • ITA

    Language
  • 195

    Pages
  • 9788838923562

    ISBN
  • 1 mm

    Width
  • 11 mm

    Height
  • 16 gram

    Weight
  • IL

    Edition
  • PAPERBACK

    Binding
  • 14 MARCH 2009

    Publish Date

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    Description

    La legge suprema delle cose è il mutamento. Nell’antichità lo diceva il poeta Lucrezio: che poneva il mondo a caso, ma negando il mistero di natura e le metamorfosi degli dèi. Eppure il fantastico chiama attorno a sé l’orizzonte tutto della vita normale. È una coestensione della realtà. E autentica se stesso, verificando il pensabile sul visibile. Lo scrittore Tommaso Landolfi, esperto in piedicapre, raccontò una volta di una capra mannara. E ne diede sufficiente testimonianza: «La fanciulla portava le sue appendici caprine come le sirene la loro coda; non ci si rimette di coscienza con questa immagine, né si...  Read More

    About the Author

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    Andrea Camilleri

    Andrea Camilleri (born september 6, 1925 in Porto Empedocle) is an Italian writer. He is considered one of the greatest Italian writers of both 20th and 21st centuries.

    Originally from Porto Empedocle, Sicily, Camilleri began studies at the Faculty of Literature in 1944, without concluding them, meanwhile publishing poems and short stories. Around this time he joined the Italian Communist Party.

    From 1948 to 1950 Camilleri studied stage and film direction at the Silvio DAmico Academy of Dramatic Arts, and began to take on work as a director and screenwriter, directing especially plays by Pirandello and Beckett. As a matter of fact, his parents knew Pirandello and were even distant friends, as he tells in his essay on Pirandello Biography of the changed son. His most famous works, the Montalbano series show many pirandellian elements: for example, the wild olive tree that helps Montalbano think, is on stage in his late work The giants of the mountain

    With RAI, Camilleri worked on several TV productions, such as Inspector Maigret with Gino Cervi. In 1977 he returned to the Academy of Dramatic Arts, holding the chair of Movie Direction, and occupying it for 20 years.

    In 1978 Camilleri wrote his first novel Il Corso Delle Cose (The Way Things Go). This was followed by Un Filo di Fumo (A Thread of Smoke) in 1980. Neither of these works enjoyed any significant amount of popularity.

    In 1992, after a long pause of 12 years, Camilleri once more took up novel-writing. A new book, La Stagione della Caccia (The Hunting Season) turned out to be a best-seller.

    In 1994 Camilleri published the first in a long series of novels: La forma dellAcqua (The Shape of Water) featured the character of Inspector Montalbano, a fractious Sicilian detective in the police force of Vigàta, an imaginary Sicilian town. The series is written in Italian but with a substantial sprinkling of Sicilian phrases and grammar. The name Montalbano is an homage to the

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