Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0004715, Tue, 25 Jan 2000 19:31:44 -0800

Subject
Re: An Amusing Beat. . (fwd)
Date
Body
** Ignazio Silone (1900-1978) was an Italian novelist who became famous in
this country as an ex-Communist disillusioned with the idealistic beliefs
of his youth. Together with 6 other ex-Communists, he published his
account of the gradual "awakening" in _The God that Failed_ (1950). His
most famous novels are _Fontamara_ (1930) and _Bread and Wine (first
published in English in 1936 and then in Italian, as _Pane e vino_, in
1937). That Kerouac lumped them together is not surprising -- they were
Europeans who were at the time "big" in America. Arthur Koestler's
_Darkness at Noon_ (1940), about Stalin's trials, was also very popular at
the time. Like Silone, Koestler, himself an ex-Communist, was one of the
six authors in _The God that Failed_, which was one of the very first
books I wanted to read -- and read -- when I came here from the
former Soviet Union. GD***

From: mary krimmel <mkrimmel@sciti.com>

Well, mistaken as he was, I'm glad that Jack wrote and I'm pricked to
investigate Silone. Who's he?

Mary Krimmel

At 01:51 PM 01/25/2000 -0800, you wrote:
>From: Iann88@aol.com
>
>In a just published collection of letters of Jack Keroac (sp!) he writes to
>a fellow writer, "after all our books come out, you won't hear about Silone
>and Nabokov anymore."
>
>Excuuuuuuse! Me! Whoever heard of you Jack, and who cares.
>
>Phil Iannarelli
>
>