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Ourselves and Others
Explore identity and connection through the body, family dynamics and self-reflection
la città in frantumi
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Jessica Rostro Benigno
Written in Dutch by Hanan Faour
8 minutes read
La ragazza che ascoltava gli uccelli
Translated from
Slovenian
to
Italian
by Lucia Gaja Scuteri
Written in Slovenian by Agata Tomažič
10 minutes read
Bestie voi tutte dei campi
Translated from
Spanish
to
Italian
by Ilaria Garelli
Written in Spanish by Adriana Murad Konings
8 minutes read
Dichiarazione di dipendenza
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Antonio De Sortis
Written in Dutch by Rebekka de Wit
9 minutes read
C'era una volta in Crimea
Translated from
Ukranian
to
Italian
by Claudia Bettiol
Written in Ukranian by Anastasia Levkova
11 minutes read
Caseggiati arancioni
Translated from
Spanish
to
Italian
by Martino Gandi
Written in Spanish by Luis Díaz
8 minutes read
Di me non sai
Lucio falls in love with "the boy" even before meeting him: just watching him from the window of his office is enough for him to become almost obsessed. When they finally meet, he discovers that Davide is much younger than him (still studying), and that he is elusive, unreliable, and "cruel" in the way only twenty-year-olds can be cruel.
For two months, Lucio and Davide have dinner together, have sex, go to the beach, and often sleep at Lucio's place. However, Davide does not fall in love. He continues to seek Lorenzo, the only man he (perhaps) truly loved, of whom he keeps only a pixelated photo on an old cellphone. Like many twenty-year-olds, he is also confused, wounded, and willing to nestle into the routine of always having a Coca-Cola ready for him in the refrigerator.
"Di me non sai" tells the story of a relationship lived in an opposite, incompatible way, whose nature is revealed to the reader only as the novel progresses. Alternating the perspectives of the two protagonists in short, sometimes very short chapters, Raffaele Cataldo shows the misalignment of feelings and the painful consequences it can have, the slow pace of hot Apulian summers, and the obsessive loves (present and absent) that, like wild oat seeds, cling to hair, shoes, and clothes.
Written in Italian by Raffaele Cataldo
4 minutes read
Sinossi
Written in Italian by Arianna Giorgia Bonazzi
4 minutes read
Lieto fine
Translated from
Serbian
to
Italian
by Sara Latorre
Written in Serbian by Jasna Dimitrijević
9 minutes read
Il ragazzo con la testa di pesce
Translated from
Czech
to
Italian
by Marco Maria Baù
Written in Czech by Eliška Beranová
9 minutes read
Constantin. Un ritratto
Translated from
Romanian
to
Italian
by Barbara Pavetto
Written in Romanian by Iulian Bocai
10 minutes read
Lungo i binari
Translated from
Bulgarian
to
Italian
by Giorgia Spadoni
Written in Bulgarian by Nevena Mitropolitska
10 minutes read
Il silenzio viene prima
Translated from
Romanian
to
Italian
by Barbara Pavetto
Written in Romanian by Ioana Maria Stăncescu
10 minutes read
Preparare un corpo
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Olga Amagliani
Written in Dutch by Nikki Dekker
8 minutes read
Le bugie si accumulano in fretta
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Antonio De Sortis
Written in Dutch by Carmien Michels
8 minutes read
TRE!
Translated from
Czech
to
Italian
by Marco Maria Baù
Written in Czech by Anna Luňáková
8 minutes read
Corridoio (Peninsula)
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Matilde Soliani
Written in Dutch by Lieven Stoefs
8 minutes read
ARRIVALS / GELIȘ (Mangiamiele)
Translated from
Dutch
to
Italian
by Matilde Soliani
Written in Dutch by Tülin Erkan
7 minutes read
Il raduno
Translated from
Romanian
to
Italian
by Andreaa David
Written in Romanian by Alexandru Potcoavă
9 minutes read
E poi di nuovo, da capo
Translated from
Serbian
to
Italian
by Katarina Mitić
Written in Serbian by Filip Grujić
9 minutes read