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The Communist

(Paperback, Main)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Communist

Contributors:

By (Author) Elizabeth McKenzie
By (author) Frederika Randall
By (author) Guido Morselli

ISBN:

9781681370781

Publisher:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Imprint:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Publication Date:

15th September 2017

UK Publication Date:

9th November 2017

Edition:

Main

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

853.914

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

384

Dimensions:

Width 128mm, Height 203mm, Spine 18mm

Weight:

350g

Description

Moody, potent, subtly apocalyptic, The Communist tells the story of Walter Ferranini, the earnest, intense, autodidact son of the working class become an Italian Communist MP who undergoes a crisis just after Khrushchev for the first time denounced the Stalinist dictatorship. Ferranini, worn-out after many years of organizing, has begun to doubt a Marxist-Leninist article of faith: that a man's labor is potentially empowering and ennobling. When he publishes an article arguing that work is drudgery, physically destructive and mentally unrewarding, not only in capitalist economies like the US and Italy, but in the Soviet Union too, he finds himself isolated from his comrades-and his American wife, whom he met during war-time exile, while the Party elders disapprove of his new love for Nuccia, a journalist, and a married woman. The Communist is the story of a life lived in a faith and of what it means when that faith is lost. We see Walter in his youth in his native Emilia Romagna. We see him in wartime exile in Camden, PA, in the belly of the capitalist beast. We see him bewildered beyond words when at last he visits Leningrad in 1958. He comes alive for us, as does his growing sense of loss. Morselli, though not a Communist himself - indeed he has been described as a man who "Questioned every contemporary certainty," - but he was an outsider and a loner, and he tells this story of a man apart with deep and compelling sympathy.

Reviews

Rich and engrossing. . . . [Morsellis] tale of a man whose certainties are destroyed will resonate with readers of any political persuasion. Publishers Weekly

Morselli was a man of wide culture and vast reading, a writer of inexhaustible intellectual curiosity, possessed of a rare talent to evoke social or historical settings. Charles Fantazzi

"Morsellis novels...are serious social studies.... The uncanny, matter-of-fact depictions...give an eerie feeling of something utterly impossible becoming all-too-plausible.... Why works of such calibre went unpublished remains a mystery...his works simply remain there to be appreciated." Nicola Rossi, complete review Quarterly

"[Morsellis] best-laid schemes of mice and monarchs are presided over by a cool and witty intellect." Christopher Wordsworth, The Guardian

"Morselli possessed the pure visionarys exactness and constructive ability; each time he chose a subject, he punctiliously documented himself thereabout...an isolated experimenter.... He could prophetically interpret history as in Il Comunista or reverse it, with a good deal of fantastic inventiveness." Alfredo Giuliani, Literary Review

"Morselli [was] a master of irony and a deft juggler of tenses." Annapaola Cancogni, The New York Times

Author Bio

G. Morselli (1912-1973) was a novelist and essayist. After serving in the Italian Army, he began writing reportages and short stories while living abroad. All of Morselli's writing was published posthumously after the author committed suicide at the age of sixty. Frederika Randall is a journalist and translator of Italian literature. She lives in Rome. Elizabeth McKenzie is the author of The Portable Veblen and is the senior editor of the Chicago Quarterly Review and the managing editor of Catamaran Literary Reader.

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