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Showing 1 - 7 of
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Cocaine (Paperback)
Pitigrilli; Translated by Eric Mosbacher; Afterword by Alexander Stille
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R391
R331
Discovery Miles 3 310
Save R60 (15%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Cocaine is the story of a young man who runs off to Paris to seek
fame, fortune, and fun. Pitigrilli's classic novel charts the
comedy and pathos of a young man's tragic trajectory. Tito Arnaudi
is a dandified hero with several mistresses he juggles. A failed
medical student, Tito is hired as a journalist in Paris, where he
investigates cocaine dens and invents lurid scandals and gruesome
deaths that he sells to newspapers as his own life becomes more
outrageous than his phony press reports. Telling of orgies and
strawberries soaked in champagne and ether, Tito lives with
intensity as he pursues his Italian girlfriend Maud (nee Maddalena)
and wealthy Armenian Kalantan, who insists on making love in a
black coffin. Provocatively illustrated, filled with lush,
intoxicating prose, Cocaine is a wicked novel about the Lost
Generation in 1920s Paris. Dizzy and decadent, Pitigrilli leaves
nothing unexplored as he presents astonishing descriptions of upper
class debauching -- strawberries and chloroform, naked dancing,
cocaine aplenty, and guests openly injecting morphine. Despite its
wit, Cocaine is a sobering account of the dangers of drugs and
sexual obsession. Tito happily trades in his twilight years for
moments of wicked ecstasy.
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Cocaine (Paperback)
Pitigrilli; Translated by Eric Mosbacher; Afterword by Alexander Stille
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R392
R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
Save R33 (8%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Named Library Journal Best Fiction in Translation 2013. "Cocaine is
a brilliant black comedy that belongs on the same shelf as Evelyn
Waugh's Vile Bodies and Dawn Powell's The Wicked Pavilion.
Pitigrilli is an acidic aphorist and a wicked observer of social
folly."--Jay McInerney, author of Bright Lights, Big City and
Brightness Falls "Pitigrilli was an enjoyable writer--spicy and
rapid--like lightning."--Umberto Eco "The name of the author
Pitigrilli ...is so well known in Italy as to be almost a byword
for 'naughtiness' ...The only wonder to us is that some
enterprising translator did not render some of his books available
in English sooner." -- The New York Times, Paris in the
1920s--dizzy and decadent. Where a young man can make a fortune
with his wits ...unless he is led into temptation. Cocaine's
dandified hero Tito Arnaudi invents lurid scandals and gruesome
deaths, and sells these stories to the newspapers. But his own life
becomes even more outrageous than his press reports when he
acquires three demanding mistresses. Elegant, witty, and wicked,
Pitigrilli's classic novel was first published in Italian in 1921
and charts the comedy and tragedy of a young man's downfall and the
lure of a bygone era. The novel's descriptions of sex and drug use
prompted church authorities to place it on a list of forbidden
books. Cocaine retains its venom even today. Pitigrilli was the pen
name of Dino Segre, born in Turin in 1893. He worked as a foreign
correspondent in Paris during the 1920s, and became equally
celebrated and notorious for a series of audacious and subversive
books. He died in 1975.
A MASTERPIECE OF LITERARY MEMORY--A POWERFUL EXPLORATION OF THE
INTERSECTIONS OF FAMILY, HISTORY, AND MEMORY.
"One evening in May 1948, my mother went to a party in New York
with her first husband and left it with her second, my father." So
begins the passionate and stormy union of Mikhail Kamenetzki, aka
Ugo Stille, one of Italy's most celebrated journalists, and
Elizabeth Bogert, a beautiful and charming young woman from the
Midwest.
Their immediate attraction and tumultuous marriage is part of a
much larger story: the mass migration of Jews from
fascist-dominated Europe in the 1930s and in the shadow of World
War II. It is the story of a crucial, painful moment in history
that reshaped much of American culture and society--but also that
of two seemingly incongruous people who managed to find love.
Theirs was an uneasy marriage between Europe and America, between
Jew and Wasp; their differences were a key to their bond yet a
source of constant strife.
Acclaimed author and frequent "New Yorker" contributor Alexander
Stille's "The Force of Things" is a powerful, beautifully written
work with the intimacy of a memoir, the pace and readability of a
novel, and the historical sweep and documentary precision of
nonfiction writing at its best. It is a portrait of people who are
buffeted about by large historical events, who try to escape their
origins but find themselves in the grip of the force of things.
Award-winning author Alexander Stille has been called ?one of the
best English-language writers on Italy? by the "New York Times Book
Review," and in "The Sack of Rome" he sets out to answer the
question: What happens when vast wealth, a virtual media monopoly,
and acute shamelessness combine in one man? Many are the crimes of
Silvio Berlusconi, Stille argues, and, with deft analysis, he
weaves them into a single mesmerizing chronicle?an epic saga of
rank criminality, cronyism, and self-dealing at the highest levels
of power.
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Pleasure (Paperback)
Gabriele D'Annunzio; Introduction by Alexander Stille; Translated by Lara Gochin Raffaelli
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R443
R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
Save R84 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The great Italian masterpiece of sensuality and seduction,
published in a new English translation - the first since the
Victorian era - that puts the sex back in Pleasure. Like Oscar
Wilde's Dorian Gray, Andrea Sperelli lives his life as a work of
art, seeking beauty and flouting the rules of morality and social
interaction along the way. In his aristocratic circles in Rome, he
is a serial seducer. But there are two women who command his
special regard: the beautiful young widow Elena, and the pure,
virgin-like Maria. In Andrea's pursuit of the exalted heights of
extreme pleasure, he plays them against each other, spinning a
sadistic web of lust and deceit. Gabriele D'Annunzio was born in
Italy in 1863. He published poetry and short stories from a young
age, quickly gaining a reputation for his frank treatment of erotic
subjects. He married in 1883 and had three children, but separated
from his wife and began an infamous affair with the actress Elonora
Duse. After stints as a journalist and politician, he enlisted as a
fighter pilot in World War I, subsequently losing an eye in a
flying accident. He became increasingly nationalistic and
politically active after the war, and his views had a strong
influence on Mussolini. In 1922 he survived a murder attempt, when
an unknown assailant defenestrated him. He died in 1938. Lara
Gochin Raffaelli is a senior lecturer at the University of Cape
Town in South Africa. Alexander Stille is a frequent contributor on
Italy to The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, and The
New Yorker and the author of several books, including The Sack of
Rome. He lives in New York.
Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino set out to destroy the Mafia. In 1992, aware that the magistrates didn't have the support of the Italian government, the Mafia assassinated them. The public outcry demanded their work was completed, which led to the toppling of crucial political alliances.
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