Andrea Bajani

Last updated
Andrea Bajani
Andrea Bajani 2009 x Wiki.jpg
Andrea Bajani. 2009
Born (1975-08-16) August 16, 1975 (age 47)
Rome, Italy
Occupation Novelist, Poet, Journalist
Language Italian
Nationality Italian
Period2000-present
Genre Literary realism
Notable awardsMondello Prize, Brancati Prize, Bagutta Prize

Andrea Bajani (born August 16, 1975) is an Italian novelist, poet, and journalist. [1] After his debut with Cordiali saluti (Einaudi, 2005), it was Se consideri le colpe (Einaudi, 2007) which brought him a great deal of attention. Antonio Tabucchi wrote about his debut novel, "I read this book with an excitement that Italian literature hasn't made me feel in ages." The book won the Super Mondello Prize, [2] the Brancati Prize, the Recanati Prize and the Lo Straniero Prize.

Contents

After three years, with his novel Ogni promessa (Einaudi, 2010; published in English as Every Promise by MacLehose Press), he won the oldest Italian literary award, the Bagutta Prize. His collection of short stories, La vita non è in ordine alfabetico (Einaudi, 2014) won the Settembrini Prize in 2014. His most recent novel is Un bene al mondo (Einaudi 2016), and is currently being made into a film. In 2013 he published Mi riconosci, a homage to the famous Italian writer Antonio Tabucchi. [3]

In 2017 Einaudi published his first book of poems, Promemoria. The second one, Dimora naturale, was published in 2020. He is also an author of journalistic essays and regularly contributes to the daily newspaper La Repubblica .

Bajani taught Creative Writing at the Scuola Holden in Turin, and has been Chief Editor for Italian fiction at Bollati Boringhieri publishing house since 2017. [4] A book of literary criticism analyzing his work, written by Sara Sicuro and entitled Andrea Bajani. Una geografia del buio, was published in 2019. [5]

Novels

Bajani's best-known novel, Se consideri le colpe (Einaudi, 2007), won the Mondello Prize, [2] the Recanati Prize, and the Brancati Prize. It will be published in English as If you Kept a Record of Sins by Archipelago in 2020. Set between Italy and the booming industrial landscape of a Romania teeming with Italian businessmen, it follows the story of Lorenzo, a son striving to come to terms with the memory of his estranged mother. Emmanuel Carrère described the novel as "at once masterful and very touching."

Ogni Promessa (Einaudi, 2010; published in English as Every Promise) is half a love-story, half an exploration of memory and its power. From Sara and Pietro's struggle to conceive a child, to the ghosts of World War II, to Italy's military attempts in Russia, the story moves between time and place, creating a vivid tangle of intersecting hopes, desires, and memories. Antonio Tabucchi described the novel as “A unique book that within the space of a novel produces a sort of concentrated comédie humaine, which upon reading expands and deflates, creating a narrative universe in development...a very special story whose themes recall the great classics.” De Telegraaf wrote of the book: “Andrea Bajani’s phrases are meandering and beautiful […]. Moving, poetic, exuberant."

La vita non è in ordine alfabetico (Einaudi, 2014) is a compilation of short stories in the vein of Italo Calvino, two for each letter of the alphabet. The style moves between poetry and prose, with seemingly unconnected stories linked together. An article in la Repubblica wrote of the book, "Bajani shows us that words can be knives, stones, soap bubbles, medicinal leaves, love potions or instruments of torture. Words are not just means of communication. They embody life, desire, the flesh. We don’t simply use words, we are made of them; we live and breathe through words." The Dutch novelist and poet, Cees Nooteboom, wrote "this book has touched a nerve."

Un bene al mondo (Einaudi, 2016) is the tale of a boy and his pain. Between fairy-tale and magic realism, the book does not fall neatly in generic literary categories. Michael Cunningham described it thus: "Bajani is a true original. His prose is possessed of the simple, cadenced rhythm I associate with fairy tales, as is a certain, subtle sense of the fantastic in his imagery, though the story he’s telling is very much for adults, and takes place in an all-too-real world. Bajani’s work is suffused with a certain innocence that not only belies but intensifies the pain and anomie of which he writes...There's love, there's wonder, as well. There is, in short, much of what makes life worth writing about."

Il libro delle case (Feltrinelli, 2021) tells the story of a man called Io through the houses that he lived in. The story spans the life of Io from birth in 1975 to 2020 through short chapters, not in chronological order, describing the places where Io or other characters in the story have lived. The novel explores life, friendship, love and emotional struggles of Io through the rooms that witnessed them. The personal story of Io is weaved together with two momentous events: the kidnapping and subsequent killing of the prime minister Aldo Moro in 1978, and the discovery of the body of well-know writer and film-maker Pier Paolo Pasolini, killed in 1975.

Poetry

Editions in other languages

Stories in collections

Reportage

Other

Translations

Theatre

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alessandro Baricco</span> Italian writer, director and performer

Alessandro Baricco is an Italian writer, director and performer. His novels have been translated into a number of languages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antonio Tabucchi</span> Italian writer and academic (1943–2012)

Antonio Tabucchi was an Italian writer and academic who taught Portuguese language and literature at the University of Siena, Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Niccolò Ammaniti</span> Italian writer

Niccolò Ammaniti is an Italian writer, winner of the Premio Strega in 2007 for As God Commands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bagutta Prize</span> Italian literary award

The Bagutta Prize is an Italian literary prize that is awarded annually to Italian writers. The prize originated among patrons of Milan's Bagutta Ristorante. The writer Riccardo Bacchelli discovered the restaurant and soon he regularly gathered numerous friends who would dine there together and discuss books. They began charging fines to the person who arrived last to an appointed meal, or who failed to appear.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gianni Celati</span> Italian writer (1937–2022)

Gianni Celati was an Italian writer, translator, and literary critic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Franca Valeri</span> Italian actress (1920–2020)

Alma Franca Maria Norsa, known professionally as Franca Valeri, was an Italian actress, playwright, screenwriter, author, and theatre director.

This bibliography on Church policies 1939–1945 includes mainly Italian publications relative to Pope Pius XII and Vatican policies during World War II. Two areas are missing and need separate bibliographies at a later date.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antonio Moresco</span> Italian writer (born 1947)

Antonio Moresco is an Italian writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fabio Pusterla</span> Swiss translator and writer in Italian (born 1957)

Fabio Pusterla is a Swiss translator and writer in Italian.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erri De Luca</span> Italian novelist, translator and poet

Enrico "Erri" De Luca is an Italian novelist, translator and poet. He has been recognized by critic Giorgio De Rienzo of Corriere della Sera as "the writer of the decade". He is also known for his opposition to the Lyon-Turin high speed train line, and is being sued for having called for its sabotage. On 19 October 2015, De Luca was cleared of inciting criminal damage. He reacted to the not-guilty verdict declaring that "An injustice has been avoided."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Valerio Magrelli</span> Italian poet

Valerio Magrelli is an Italian poet.

The Acqui Award of History is an Italian prize. The prize was founded in 1968 for remembering the victims of the Acqui Military Division who died in Cefalonia fighting against the Nazis. The jury is composed of seven members: six full professors of history and a group of sixty (60) ordinary readers who have just one representative in the jury. The Acqui Award Prize is divided into three sections: history, popular history, and historical novels. A special prize entitled “Witness to the Times,” given to individual personalities known for their cultural contributions and who have distinguished themselves in describing historical events and contemporary society, may also be conferred. Beginning in 2003 special recognition for work in multimedia and iconography--”History through Images”—was instituted.

Enzo Fileno Carabba is an Italian writer with published works in Italy and abroad. He writes short stories, scripts for radio, librettos and children's books.

Paul Anthony Ginsborg was a British historian. In the 1980s, he was Professor at the University of Siena; from 1992, he was Professor of Contemporary European History at the University of Florence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Massimo Carlotto</span> Italian writer and playwright

Massimo Carlotto is an Italian writer and playwright.

Anne Milano Appel is an American translator of Italian literature. She obtained a doctorate in Romance languages from Rutgers University in 1970. She has translated, among others, works by Claudio Magris, Paolo Giordano, Giovanni Arpino and Goliarda Sapienza. She was awarded the John Florio Prize in 2012 for her translation of Arpino's Scent of a Woman. She is also working on English translations of Giordano's Like Family, Syrian Dust by Francesca Borri and Don't Tell Me You're Afraid by Giuseppe Catozzella.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maurizio De Giovanni</span> Italian author of mystery novels (born 1958)

Maurizio de Giovanni is an Italian author of mystery novels.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rosella Postorino</span> Italian author (born 1978)

Rosella Postorino is an Italian author. In 2013 she won the International Prize Città di Penne and in 2018 she won the Rapallo Carige Prize and the Premio Campiello.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chiara Frugoni</span> Italian historian (1940–2022)

Chiara Frugoni was an Italian historian and academic, specialising in the Middle Ages and church history. She was awarded the Viareggio Prize in 1994 for her essay, Francesco e l'invenzione delle stimmate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Massimo Mila</span> Italian politician and musicologist

Massimo Mila was an Italian musicologist, music critic, intellectual and anti-fascist.

References

  1. "Andrea Bajani". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2019-04-09.
  2. 1 2 "L'Albo d'Oro dei vincitori - La storia del premio - Premio letterario internazionale Mondello". premiomondello.it. Archived from the original on 2019-03-21. Retrieved 2019-04-09.
  3. "Andrea Bajani — internationales literaturfestival berlin". literaturfestival.com. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  4. "Editoria, Bollati Boringhieri". Il Libraio.it. 4 September 2017.
  5. "Andrea Bajani. Una geografia del buio". ibs.it.