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Rosetta Loy (1931–2022)

Autor(a) de The Dust Roads of Monferrato

28+ Works 630 Membros 16 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Born in Rome in 1931, Rosetta Loy is one of Italy's leading novelists & journalists. She has written seven novels & been honored with every major Italian literary award. In 1996 she received the prestigious European Prize for literature. Her work has been translated into eleven languages. (Bowker mostrar mais Author Biography) mostrar menos

Includes the name: Rosette Loy

Obras de Rosetta Loy

Associated Works

The Princesse de Clèves (1678) — Tradutor, algumas edições2,292 cópias
The Virago Book of Wanderlust and Dreams (1998) — Contribuinte — 36 cópias
New Italian Women: A Collection of Short Fiction (1989) — Contribuinte — 20 cópias
The Quality of Light: Modern Italian Short Stories (1993) — Contribuinte — 13 cópias
Prachtig weer verhalen (1994) — Contribuinte — 3 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Loy, Rosetta
Data de nascimento
1931-05-15
Data de falecimento
2022-10-01
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
Italië
Local de nascimento
Rome, Italië
Local de falecimento
Rome, Italië
Ocupação
auteur
vertaler Frans - Italiaans

Membros

Resenhas

I have had this book for ages and have avoided it for ages. It turns out that I did so for no good reason. I enjoyed it and while it is not a great work of art, it was a pleasure to read. I should note immediately that it is almost entirely description; dialogue is minimal at best. I cannot recall reading a book quite like it and yet it works well. The story follows a farming family in the Italian Piedmont, near France, through much of the 19th century. Its strong suit is the author’s romantic, often lyrical description of the lives of the family, the countryside, friends, relations, and servants. Wars, disease, weather, poverty…everything comes and goes, bringing good outcomes and bad. And everything takes places against the backdrop of Monferrato and its seasons. I suspect it will be slow and tedious for some, but I found its understatedness its strength and enjoyed it more than I anticipated.… (mais)
 
Marcado
Gypsy_Boy | outras 4 resenhas | Aug 24, 2023 |
This lovely, poetic, understated little book follows the multigenerational story, spanning the late 1790s until perhaps 1900, of a farming family in Monferrato, Italy, in the Piedmont region, near France. The strength of the book lies in Loy’s lush, almost dreamlike description of the lives and loves of the family and their friends, relations, and servants. Wars come and go, bringing cholera and high taxes; babies are conceived, birthed, and live only a few days or years, or grow into healthy young people with lives and loves of their own. Each person has a story, some subtle, some more direct – and against it all is the backdrop of Montferrato itself, and how it changes with the seasons: by turns dusty and dry, or sodden with spring rains and mud, or icy and snowy, or lush and green with wheat and the grapevines for the wines for which the region is known. This is a quiet, satisfying book that provides a glimpse into the lives of ordinary people two hundred years ago.… (mais)
 
Marcado
FinallyJones | outras 4 resenhas | Nov 17, 2021 |
3.5 stars (may round up later)

If you avoid holocaust books, you will want to avoid this. In this short memoir, Italian author Rosetta Loy looks at her childhood in 1935-1945 Rome. She was about 5 in 1936, and she did not really see, then, what she can recognize in retrospect. As part of the solid middle class, her family could still travel--and had no issues with hunger--up until about 1940.

There were several Jewish families in her building and neighborhood, and she also looked for what became of them. She remembers one neighbor disappearing overnight, and another family was taken away early one morning. She managed to track down what happened to some--and even found testimony. One man, though, she was unable to find anything about. He fled/went into hiding and she can find no records.

This book is also a condemnation of Pope Pius XII. Pius XI was standing for the Jews, but died in 1939 at age 82. Pius XII was German and, as she portrays him, a bit of a coward who cared only for the church itself and Vatican City.

So while I found this book very interesting--an adult re-examining her childhood memories in light of what she knows as an adult, and adding primary source research (much of which only became available decades after the end of WWII). But what I feel is missing is what her parents were thinking--she mentions other families, shops (including a whorehouse!), churches, and convents, that hid Jewish people for one or many nights. Did her parents do nothing? Did she ever discuss the events with her parents and older siblings? She only mentions her teemaged brother running away twice, the second tine to join the partisans--and coming back both times, hungry. Then they teased him. As an older adults she recognized that he was the only one in the family who tried. He did not succeed, but he tried and they teased him.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Dreesie | outras 2 resenhas | Oct 30, 2021 |
This family saga follows the family of The Great Masten (name lost with the town records) through the 19th century, outside of Alessandria, Piemonte. Translated from Italian with dialect left untranslated. Won the Rapallo Carige Prize in 1988.

This story fits in with the history of Piemonte, and explores its effects on one land-owning (but not noble) family. When the story begins, this area has been annexed by France. Then it is The Kingdom of Sardinia. When it ends, it is Italy. There are two wars against the Austrians. There are droughts and floods, cold, illness, hunger and bounty. Talent, dreams, and boredom. Family fortunes--not just of this family, but also of noble and mercantile families--go up and down.

I enjoyed this book, particularly getting to read translated historical fiction. This is not a place and time period that English fiction (US or England) set. There is very little dialogue, which felt strange at first, but it somehow works, as Loy describes the scenes--the colors, the weather, the dirt, the travels of soldiers and women visiting their families.Seeing the dialect left in place--it is generally followed by a translation--it is an odd mix of Italian and French, and similiarities to Genoese are there. The constant talk in the book of dialects is so real, as it is very real in Italy today.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Dreesie | outras 4 resenhas | Nov 5, 2020 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
28
Also by
6
Membros
630
Popularidade
#39,984
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Resenhas
16
ISBNs
92
Idiomas
7
Favorito
1

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