Tag: books

Italian Authors To Know: Franco Loi

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Life

Franco Loi was born in Genoa on January 20, 1930. When he was seven years old, his father moved the family to Milan, Italy’s second-largest city and an important center of the arts and culture. The Milanese dialect of his new hometown would become a great influence on Franco’s later work as a writer, poet, and essayist.

During his childhood and teenage years in the 1940s, Loi witnessed the murders of Italian partisans, the resistance protesters who were opposed to Mussolini and to Italy’s alignment with the Axis powers and Adolph Hitler’s Germany. These early experiences would influence some of the major themes of his writing, which include war, the presence of evil in the world, and regret for a lost paradise.

Loi started out working as an accountant and a bookkeeper. He became a clerk working at the port of Genoa and from there moved into doing public relations work. In 1962, he took a job with Mondadori, Italy’s largest publishing house.

Shortly after entering the world of publishing through the administrative route, Loi began writing poetry in the Milanese dialect, the main language used in his production, even though, we can also find inserts of Genovese, the dialect spoken in his childhood and of colornese, the dialect spoken by the mother from Parma (e.g. L’Angel). He described this early writing as if it were dictated to him from someone else, explaining his prolific output.

Poetry

Loi’s poem “The Cart” was published in a journal in 1973 and attracted some attention, which continued when his “Love Poems” was published in 1974. By 1975 he had gained some positive critical reviews, particularly for his poetry collection Stròlegh (Astrologer), which won him the Bonfiglio Prize and remains his best-known work. Since then, Loi has garnered Nonino, Librex Premio Montale, and Brancati Prizes, which are Italian literary awards. He has also been recognized as a distinguished member of the community of Milan and of Lombardy, the region around Milan.

As an artist, Loi’s style embraces both neologisms and archaic words, particularly archaic words that refer back to Dante’s Divine Comedy. His tone uses a mixture of voices, including street slang, designed to give expression to society’s oppressed and exploited members.

In addition to his poetry, Franco Loi wrote the 2001 short story collection The Breadth of the Sky and several collections of essays. He has been publishing literary criticism since 1980.

Italian Author Profile: Alda Merini

Ilaria Verunelli

Alda Merini is an Italian poet who was born in Milan in 1931. She sparked interest in reading and writing at a very young age. Her father encouraged her and published a booklet of her poems when she was ten. She went to elementary school and made great grades but her family didn’t have money to further her education so she attended vocational school but was unable to get into high school since she didn’t pass the Italian exam.

Career

Alda continued to write poems, devoting herself to it at the age of 15. Giacinto Spagnoletti discovered her poetic talent and invited her into his circle of poets and critics which kicked off her career. She was published in Spagnoletti’s anthology in 1950. She then published her first book, La presenza di Orfeo, in 1953. In 1961 she stopped writing due to mental illness. She was committed to an asylum. She centered much of her poetry about her time in mental institutions dealing with her mental illness as well as the dramatic experiences in the institutions. She was nominated for the Nobel Prize twice and she was awarded the Librex-Guggenheim Eugenio Montale Prize as well as the Premio Viareggio.

Her Works

Alda Merini focused on love in her earlier works and in her later works, illnesss, nature, and myth. A few of her poems and books include:

  • Fiore di poesia
  • La terra santa
  • La presenza di Orfeo
  • La pazza della porta accanto
  • Uomini miei
  • Magnificat: Un incontro con Maria
  • Le madri non cercano il paradiso

Quotes:

“ We are hungry for tenderness,
in a world where everything abounds
we are poor of this feeling
which is like a caress
for our heart
we need these small gestures
that make us feel good
Tenderness
is a disinterested and generous love,
that does not ask anything else
to be understood and appreciated.”

“Il dolore non è altro che la sorpresa di non conoscerci.”

“When I raise a toast to madness, I toast myself as well.”
She made significant contributions to Italian poetry and many of her works have been translated and admired in other countries as well. She passed in 2009 from cancer. Her works and words still continue to flourish and inspire many.

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