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Marcovaldo, Or, The Seasons in the City

Front Cover
17 Reviews
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1983 - Fiction - 121 pages
An unskilled worker in a drab northern Italian industrial city of the 1950s and 1960s, Marcovaldo has a practiced eye for spotting natural beauty and an unquenchable longing to come a little closer to the unspoiled world of his imagining. Much to the puzzlement of his wife, his children, his boss, and his neighbors, he chases his dreams, gives rein to his fantasies, tries-with more ingenuousness than skill-to lessen his burden and that of those around him. The results are never the anticipated ones.
  

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Calvino's prose is beautiful. - Goodreads
It's easy to see his progression as a writer. - Goodreads
And the premise seemed a bit odd. - Goodreads

Review: Marcovaldo

User Review  - Meghan Fidler - Goodreads

Italo Calvino's "Marcovaldo or The Seasons in the City" is brilliant. While lighter in mood than Honoré de Balzac's "La Comédie humaine" the narrative follows a similar path: the pitfalls and twists ... Read full review

Review: Marcovaldo

User Review - Goodreads

I have two (kind of three) other works by Italo Calvino sitting on my shelf but chose to start with this one, because it's the shortest one and I read it as a transition piece between two denser books ...

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
5
Section 3
13
Section 4
26
Section 5
31
Section 6
36
Section 7
40
Section 8
45
Section 11
67
Section 12
71
Section 13
77
Section 14
84
Section 15
90
Section 16
97
Section 17
101
Section 18
112

Section 9
51
Section 10
60

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From the heart: a creative approach to writing
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About the author (1983)

Novelist and short story writer Italo Calvino was born in Cuba in 1923, and grew up in Italy, graduating from the University of Turin in 1947. He is remembered for his distinctive style of fables. Much of his first work was political, including Il Sentiero dei Nidi di Ragno (The Path of the Nest Spiders, 1947), considered one of the main novels of neorealism. In the fifties, Calvino began to explore fantasy and myth as extensions of realism. Il Visconte Dimezzato (The Cloven Knight, 1952), concerns a knight split in two in combat who continues to live on as two separates, one good and one bad, deprived of the link which made them a moral whole. In Il Barone Rampante (Baron in the Trees, 1957), a boy takes to the trees to avoid eating snail soup and lives an entire, fulfilled life without ever coming back down. Calvino was awarded an honorary degree from Mount Holyoke College in 1984 and died in 1985, following a cerebral hemorrhage.

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