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"La Zona Cieca" - Chiara Gamberale
Parole d’autore
Mia sorella. Come un fiore improbabile, cresciuto su un piccolo grumo di terra attaccato alla roccia. Da lei ho appreso la resistenza.
“L’arminuta”, Donatella Di Pietrantonio
1986 – Alberto Ongaro’s “La partita”: Adventure, Mystery, and the Campiello Prize By Patrizia Riello Pera, Padua, Italy. In 1986, the Campiello Prize was awarded to Alberto Ongaro for “La partita”, a novel that brings back to the centre of Italian fiction the pleasure of great adventure and of storytelling built on mystery, the unexpected, and the continual transformation of events.... https://urbanmoodmagazine.com/1986-alberto-ongaros-la-partita-adventure-mystery-and-the-campiello-prize/
1985 – Mario Biondi Wins the Campiello Prize with “Gli occhi di una donna” By Patrizia Riello Pera, Padua, Italy. In 1985, the Campiello Prize was awarded to Mario Biondi for “Gli occhi di una donna”, a novel that stands out within the Italian literary landscape for its extraordinary ability to portray the complexity of feelings and human relationships through sober, elegant, and deeply empathetic writing.... https://urbanmoodmagazine.com/1985-mario-biondi-wins-the-campiello-prize-with-gli-occhi-di-una-donna/
1984 – Achille Campanile’s “Manuale di conversazione” Wins the Campiello Prize By Patrizia Riello Pera, Padua, Italy. In 1984, the Campiello Prize was awarded posthumously to Achille Campanile for “Manuale di conversazione”, finally recognising one of the most original and unpredictable authors in twentieth-century Italian literature.... https://urbanmoodmagazine.com/1984-achille-campaniles-manuale-di-conversazione-wins-the-campiello-prize/
1983 – Carlo Sgorlon and “La conchiglia di Anataj”: A Timeless Campiello Prize Novel By Patrizia Riello Pera, Padua, Italy. In 1983, the Campiello Prize was awarded to Carlo Sgorlon for his novel “La conchiglia di Anataj”, one of the most representative and fascinating works of Italian fiction of the 1980s.... https://urbanmoodmagazine.com/1983-carlo-sgorlon-and-la-conchiglia-di-anataj-a-timeless-campiello-prize-novel/
1982 – Primo Levi Wins the Campiello Prize with “If Not Now, When?” By Patrizia Riello Pera, Padua, Italy. In 1982, the Italian cultural landscape, in one of its most fertile and intellectually stimulating seasons, witnessed a literary consecration of fundamental historical and civic importance: the prestigious Campiello Prize was, in fact, deservedly awarded to Primo Levi for his extraordinary volume entitled “If Not Now, When?”, a novel of exceptional and overwhelming narrative, epic, and documentary power, marking a crucial, mature, and in many respects unprecedented turning point within the overall body of work of the celebrated Turin-born author.... https://urbanmoodmagazine.com/1982-primo-levi-wins-the-campiello-prize-with-if-not-now-when/