[HN Gopher] Italo Calvino, The Art of Fiction No. 130 (1992)
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Italo Calvino, The Art of Fiction No. 130 (1992)
Author : benbreen
Score : 58 points
Date : 2021-03-09 06:01 UTC (17 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (theparisreview.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (theparisreview.org)
| Ftuuky wrote:
| "If on a winter's night, a traveler" and "Invisible Cities" are
| probably his most known works but I highly recommend "Mr.
| Palomar", it's very small and easy to read but truly a
| mindbender.
| ineedasername wrote:
| If you enjoy Calvino then Jorge Luis Borges will likely also
| entertain you. _The Library of Babel_ , for example, is an
| excellent story.
| eatonphil wrote:
| Makes sense. I read Invisible Cities and really didn't care for
| it. It seemed decently written but was just terribly
| uninteresting. I'm trying to work through Borges' Ficciones at
| the moment and I like it even less.
|
| I wish I could enjoy them!
| molbioguy wrote:
| My favorite Calvino book is _Cosmicomics_. It 's a collection of
| his stories that deal with a scientific principle that he weaves
| into a beautiful fantasy story!
| johncave wrote:
| Italo Calvino is a sublime writer. One of my favourites is his
| short story Love Far From Home -- it's funny, poignant and
| strangely reassuring. Salman Rushdie does an excellent reading in
| the New Yorker's fiction podcast:
|
| https://www.newyorker.com/podcast/fiction/salman-rushdie-rea...
| seanhunter wrote:
| Love Italo Calvino. For people interested in getting into it, "If
| on a winter's night, a traveller" is probably the best place to
| start and isn't a tough read.
| bshimmin wrote:
| I would attach a note of caution to this - having loved the
| book myself, I gave my mother (a lady not terribly well-versed
| in postmodern literature) a copy of _Se una notte d 'inverno un
| viaggiatore_ and it took her quite some time to forgive me; she
| used the words "pointless" and "stupid" several times in her
| summary of it!
| johncave wrote:
| I also would hesitate to recommend IOAWNAT to your average
| reader, despite thoroughly enjoying it myself. You have to
| have a certain patience for literary tricks to really enjoy
| it.
| brianjunyinchan wrote:
| I feel the different vignettes also provide something relatable
| to more people than one story would
| whitepoplar wrote:
| Agreed, though I'm partial to _Invisible Cities_. ;)
| ghotli wrote:
| Came to this thread to also plug Invisible Cities. I love
| picking up that book, reading a short prose poem and getting
| the feels of the imagery he evokes.
|
| It's my stranded on a desert island pick, and for good
| reason.
| rsync wrote:
| I, also, love Invisible Cities and would recommend it ...
| whitepoplar wrote:
| I find it oddly comforting that the storage provider I plan
| to use at some point in the future (just getting the hang
| of ZFS now) loves Calvino. :-D
| ericol wrote:
| I understood that reference.
| losvedir wrote:
| I recently listened to the audiobook of Invisible Cities,
| narrated by John Lee, and it was phenomenal. The strange
| thing is, I actually don't think I would have cared for the
| novel, had I read it myself, but Lee captured the sort of
| surreal mood exquisitely, and it was very pleasant to just
| lay back and listen to, or to have on while walking through a
| park.
| riffraff wrote:
| I also believe Invisible Cities to be way more approachable
| than "if on a winter's night..".
|
| I absolutely loved both, but I think the latter might out off
| some folks.
|
| But given the HN audience, I feel that "Cosmicomiche" might
| be a very good choice too!
| adyavanapalli wrote:
| My favorite short story from Italo Calvino is _The Distance of
| the Moon_. RadioLab did an episode with it being read by Liev
| Schreiber [1] and it 's wonderful! I believe it partly inspired a
| Disney Pixar short by the name La Luna [2].
|
| [1]:
| https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/articles/28257...
|
| [2]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbuq7w3ZDUQ
| ycombinete wrote:
| My favourite thing about Calvino are his letters. Such great
| observations, and writing. They are up there with Evelyn Waugh's
| letters.
| jbullock35 wrote:
| Can you say more about the Calvino and Waugh letters? Do you
| like them for beautiful prose, for lively gossip, for
| introspection -- or what?
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