Home
Results for: Cesare Pavese
Britannica Conci...(1 of 6 sources) Open/Close data Source
Cesare Pavese
(born Sept. 9, 1908, Santo Stefano Belbo, Italy — died Aug. 27, 1950, Turin) Italian poet, critic, novelist, and translator. Pavese founded, and was long an editor with, the publishing house of Einaudi. Denied a creative outlet by fascist control of literature, he did translations in the 1930s and '40s that introduced many modern U.S. and English writers to Italy. Much of his own work appeared between the end of World War II and his death by suicide at age 41; some was published posthumously. His best works include Dialogues with Leucò (1947), poetic conversations on the human condition; the novel The Moon and the Bonfire (1950); and the journal This Business of Living (1952).

For more information on Cesare Pavese, visit Britannica.com.



Biographies Open/Close data Source
Columbia Ency. Open/Close data Source
Quotes By Open/Close data Source
Wikipedia Open/Close data Source
Mentioned In Open/Close data Source