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Book reviews for "Tomasi_di_Lampedusa,_Giuseppe" sorted by average review score:

The Siren and Selected Writings
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (1996)
Authors: Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa, Archibald Colquhoun, David Gilmour, Guido Waldman, Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa, and Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa
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Good follow-up to The Leopard
A collection of Di Lampedusa's writings aside from his great novel. The memoirs of the author's youth in aristocratic Sicily are delightful to read; clearly the atmosphere of the Leopard was taken from Di Lampedusa's own life. The stories are also quite good. The literary criticism is somewhat out of place, in my opinion, alongside a collection of narrative. If you liked the Leopard, this is definitely worth reading.

The Siren...dream or reality?
Everybody has to read this book, especially the siren, this story collect all the dreams of a man, and let us to think that when we find the right woman, the right love, we can't forget it, we can't substitute it, we can't hide it to ourselves.The author with a very simple story express the meaning of the love, the pure love...read it, I can just tell you this...and you'll dream...you'll smile

The Siren...dream or reality?
I think that everybody has to read this book, especially the siren, this story collect all the dreams of a man, and let us to think that when we find the right woman, the right love, we can't forget it, we can't substitute it, we can't hide it to ourselves.The author with a very simple story express the meaning of the love, the pure love...read it, I can just tell you this...and you'll dream...you'll smile.


The Leopard
Published in Paperback by Pantheon Books (1982)
Authors: Giuseppe Lampesusa, Giuseppe T. Di Lampedusa, and Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa
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A great novel, beautifully written and very moving
I approached The Leopard with high expectations which were thoroughly satisfied. The novel, apparently based on the life of di Lampedusa's great-grandfather, is the story of a proud, sensual, Sicilian aristocrat at the time of Italy's Risorgimento (1860 or thereabouts), and his reaction to the changes he sees in his society: mainly the inevitable, indeed necessary, but still in some ways regrettable displacement of the aristocracy from their traditional position. The title character is a wonderful creation, and the lesser characters about him (his wife and children, his favorite nephew, the Jesuit priest Father Pirrone, and so on), are also very elegantly depicted. The Sicilian countryside, and telling details of social life at that time period, are also fascinating elements of the book. And finally, the prose is wonderful, and this translation seems very good, save for just a couple mild moments of clunkiness.

The Leopard is the story of Don Fabrizio, Prince of Salina, at the time of the main action a man in his forties, with several children. He is a sort of benevolent tyrant in his household, a man of a very old family, accustomed to knowing his place and to having those about him know their places. The Prince is also a man of great sensual appetites, careless with his money (though not wasteful or dissolute), politically knowledgeable but completely apolitical in action, and also an amateur astronomer of some note.

When the story opens, the Risorgimento is ongoing, but it is clear that it will be ultimately successful, and that the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies will be absorbed into the newly unified, somewhat more democratic, Italy. Don Fabrizio, out of loyalty, is nominally supportive of the old regime, but he realistically stays out of the conflict. His favorite nephew, Tancredi, the penniless but charismatic son of his sister, is an ardent supporter of Garibaldi (leader of the revolution).

Several long chapters, separated by months, follow the progress of the Risorgimento at a distance, and more closely follow events which impinge directly on Don Fabrizio's life, yet which reflect the coming societal changes. These include the plebiscite to confirm popular support for the unification of Italy, his nephew Tancredi's love affair and eventual marriage to the daughter of a wealthy but decidedly lower class neighbor, his daughter's reaction to the attentions of a friend of Tancredi's, and Father Pirrone's visit to his home village. Finally, the action jumps forward some decades to the Prince's death, in a very moving and beautiful chapter, then still further forward to the household of his unmarried daughters in their old age.

The events of the story tellingly illustrate both the changing face of society and also the nature of Sicilian society in general. At another level, the Prince's aging and death, and his knowledge of his own mortality, echo the senescence of his class. Loving descriptions of the Prince's homes, of his meals, of balls, of hunting, of peasant life, of politics both at the Prince's level and at the level of the peasants, of the attitude of churchmen towards their flock (especially Father Pirrone's toleration but not approval of his friend's sensual escapades) are laced throughout the novel. Moreover, the Prince himself is a truly compelling, charismatic character, full of faults but an admirable man nonetheless. Also, the narrator's voice is often with us, ironically, often even cynically, commenting on the expectations of the characters and both their failings and the failings of "real life" to meet their expectations, but, though sad, the voice is never bitter.

A Classic story from Sicily
A slowly crumbling dynasty. An erratic leader. A turbulent political landscape. Giuseppe Lampedusa's The Leopard takes the reader through the political revolution in Italy during the 1860s through the lens of an aging Sicilian prince. The prince, Don Fabrizio, is a tragic character whose struggle evokes many different emotions that will be interesting to most readers. Don Fabrizio's response to the instability highlights the complexities of leadership and hierarchy. The book is a good leisure read for anyone who likes historical fiction.

Perhaps One Must Be Over 50?
The grace and power of this story could be quite overwhelming if it weren't for the cleverness we all adopt while reading it, so that at its end, we are neither shocked nor saddened, but rather challenged to take up our own pathetic cudgels and go at the world ourselves. Or not. A beautful tale.


Desideri mortali : oratorio profano per Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
Published in Unknown Binding by Gremese ()
Author: Ruggero Cappuccio
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El príncep i el felí : una lectura de El Guepard
Published in Unknown Binding by Pagáes Editors ()
Author: Miquel Pairolí
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Il Gattopardo, o, La metafora decadente dell'esistenza
Published in Unknown Binding by Milella ()
Author: Maria Pagliara-Giacovazzo
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Il romanzo antistorico
Published in Unknown Binding by Editori riuniti ()
Author: Vittorio Spinazzola
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L'ambra del Baltico : carteggio immaginario con Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
Published in Unknown Binding by Feltrinelli ()
Author: Boris Biancheri Chiappori
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L'intimità e la storia : lettura del "Gattopardo"
Published in Unknown Binding by Einaudi ()
Author: Francesco Orlando
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The last leopard : a life of Giuseppe di Lampedusa
Published in Unknown Binding by Quartet Books ()
Author: David Gilmour
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Le sirene : analisi semiotiche intorno a un racconto di Tomasi di Lampedusa
Published in Unknown Binding by CLUEB ()
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