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This Business of Living: Diaries 1935-1950



This Business of Living is a diary written by Italian author, Giovanni Pavese. The diary covers the years 1935-1950 and documents his thoughts and feelings about life and love. Pavese was very unhappy with his life and his relationships, and he committed suicide in 1950. However, his diary reveals a much more complex and sensitive man than the public ever knew. more details
Key Features:
  • The diary of Giovanni Pavese, written from 1935-1950
  • Documents the author's thoughts and feelings about life and love
  • Very unhappy with his life and his relationships, and committed suicide in 1950


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Features
Author Cesare Pavese
Format Paperback
ISBN 9781412810197
Publisher Transaction Publishers
Manufacturer Transaction Publishers
Description
This Business of Living is a diary written by Italian author, Giovanni Pavese. The diary covers the years 1935-1950 and documents his thoughts and feelings about life and love. Pavese was very unhappy with his life and his relationships, and he committed suicide in 1950. However, his diary reveals a much more complex and sensitive man than the public ever knew.

On June 23rd, 1950, Pavese, Italys greatest modern writer received the coveted Strega Award for his novel Among Women Only. On August 26th, in a small hotel in his home town of Turin, he took his own life. Shortly before his death, he methodically destroyed all his private papers. His diary is all that remains and for this the contemporary reader can be grateful. Contemporary speculation attributed this tragedy to either an unhappy love affair with the American film star Constance Dawling or his growing disillusionment with the Italian Communist Party. His Diaries, however, reveal a man whose art was his only means of repressing the specter of suicide which had haunted him since childhood: an obsession that finally overwhelmed him. As John Taylor notes, he possessed something much more precious than a political theory: a natural sensitivity to the plight and dignity of common people, be they bums, priests, grape-pickers, gas station attendants, office workers, or anonymous girls picked up on the street (though to women, the author could-as he admitted-be as misogynous as he was affectionate). Bitter and incisive, This Business of Living is both moving and painful to read and stands with James Joyces Letters and Andre Gides Journals as one of the great literary testaments of the twentieth century.
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