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Fleeting Rome: In Search of la Dolce Vita

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ISBN: 978-0-470-87185-0

December 2005

224 pages

Description
‘Levi was a consummate listener, as his book often beguilingly demonstrates…[and] like all good writers, is quirky and idiosyncratic, and pounces on… curious details.’ Sunday Times

‘the stirring story of an incomparable era’ Times Literary Review

‘characteristic elegance and insight,…a tribute to the history, [and] spirit of one of Europe’s most remarkable cities.’ London Review of Books

‘this collection of beautifully-fashioned essays spans the post-war and dolce vita years in the “eternal city”.’ Choice Magazine

In this complex love affair with Rome, Carlo Levi explores the streets of a city at once fleeting and eternal, noble and plebeian, a city of dreams and illusions. Through the daily bustle of Rome’s street traders, housewives and students, the children at the little theatre of Pulcinella, the men in the street cafés and the exuberant festivities, Levi magnificently brings to life Rome in the Dolce Vita era.

About the Author
Carlo Levi (1902-1972), writer, painter and politician, was one of the great Italian talents of the twentieth century. He was interned in the South of Italy as an anti-fascist during the Second World war, where he wrote his masterpiece, Cristo si é Fermato a Eboli (Christ Stopped at Eboli). The work was subsequently turned into a film and became recognized as one of the great works of twentieth-century literature. Subsequent works have included a wide range of fiction and non-fiction, including L'Orologio (1950), Le parole sono pietre (1955), Le mille  patrie, Lo specchio and Scritti di critica d'arte. From 1963 to 1972 he was Senator of the Republic.