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      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

        Flips department

        by Enrico Morello

        The flips are those that Arturo Speranza, the protagonist of this novel, must do. Arturo is a fifty-year-old lawyer with an increasingly faint past of wealth, he wanders between tax collection notices, the maintenance of his ex-wife and class trips that are to be paid for his children. Things seem to change for the better when suddenly a friend from high school times reappears, which has since become very rich in a rather mysterious way and after a stay abroad for many years. The old companion entrusts Arturo with all the legal battles of his firm, conducted against an oligopoly and powerful forces that by every means try to hinder his activity. This will start a struggle without quarter that will see the two former schoolmates fight side by side, until things change again. An amusing novel, a tragic comedy about today’s middle class, on the changes and disappointments of an entire generation, grown with the myth of economic progress and ended up dealing with the failure of an entire nation, experienced as a personal failure. A portrait that is at times comic and at times bitter, of how in Italy large capitals and opportunities are in the hands of few, and unfortunately not the best among us, while an entire class of professionals is in fact humiliated.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

        The year of the foreigner

        by Sebastiano Modadori

        Milan, 1989. Filippo Degani, a senior year high school student, is an ordinary boy: middle-class family, the boring school routine, the girls, the iron friendship with the inseparable Claudio, the best friend with whom he shares the dates with the girls and the passion for football. In the background, high school soccer tournaments and the exploits of the legendary Milan soccer team of Arrigo Sacchi, Gullit and Van Basten. The equilibrium of this very Italian glimpse on the end of the Eighties is overwhelmed by the arrival, in Filippo’s school, of Robert Horowitz, immediately renamed ‘the Stranger’ – rich, beautiful but above all mysterious: nothing is known of his past nor of the reasons that prompted the family to move from London to the outskirts of Milan. Between memorable soccer matches and night raids, the friendship with the Stranger will turn Filippo’s life like a glove, a revolution that will force him to measure the difficulty of remaining true to himself.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

        Friends I don’t have

        by Sebastiano Modadori

        Four children by three former wives, six lawyers, dozens of lovers including the Widow, the Starlet, Zita and especially the Wandered Jewess, a debt of four thousand euro and eight days to return it to a group of ‘impatient’ Romanians. So it begins the story of Julian discouragement, the last descendant of a large middle-class family, unable to stay out of trouble. The chronicle of these eight days is a trip through Tuscany, Rome and Milan in search of money; a Way of the Cross of betrayal, where friends are no longer young, no longer carefree and have no more desire to help him, closed in the cocoon of their home lives. And then the memories of his grandfather businessman standing every day at four in the morning; the grandfather who at eight had already visited the first of his mistresses, and who decides to be buried in his pajamas because he was born poor, and because he knows how uncomfortable is to sleep fully clothed.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

        I Know Love Better Than You

        by Andrea D'Agostino

        Vincenzo lives in Sicily in the Eighties. Though only twelve years old, he is sexually precocious and pursues whichever of his female cousins he can get his hands on. His father is a labourer who works in various parts of mainland Italy and comes home for the weekend now and again. One day, however, he doesn’t come back, and Vincenzo’s life starts to change. Opposite Vincenzo’s home is a church, where a handsome new priest, Father Calogero, has just been appointed to the parish. One of Vincenzo’s grandmothers falls under his spell, and asks him to be the godfather at Vincenzo’s confirmation. After a show of reluctance, Father Calogero agrees. While everyone celebrates after the ceremony, Father Calogero offers Vincenzo a summer job as his assistant and since the next day Vincenzo spends every day in the church. Father Calogero showers Vincenzo with presents, becomes increasingly affectionate and intrusive, and abuses him._x000B_The sexual violence becomes a monotonous routine, broken only by the arrival of Salvatore, a former victim of Father Calogero’s abuse. The adult Vincenzo is overwhelmed by remorse and guilt, he is a social outcast, living a hand-to-mouth existence. Vincenzo grows closer to his grandmother, and suddenly some kind of redemption seems possible. But pain gnaws away at him, and the past comes back, demanding closure

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