Angels of Youth

Angels of Youth, by Luigi Fontanella, is a book of poems written originally in Italian and based on his Italian volume Ceres.

Synopsis

It is divided into four sections, Ceres, Stanzas for Emma, Ars Poetica, and Ballads.[1]

It includes "Stanzas for Emma" dedicated to the poet's daughter, and "Sequence for my Father" which reflects on his dead parent.[1]

Publication history

Angels of Youth is a translation of Ceres, Fontanella's ninth volume of poetry, originally published in Italian by Caramanica Editore in 1993.[2] The Italian edition won The Orazio Caputo Prize[3] and The Olindo de Gennaro Prize,[1] and received over thirty reviews in prestigious literary journals in Europe and the United States. Devised with American readers in mind, the Xenos Books translation makes subtle modifications in the content, reorganizes the book's structure and adds two new poems.

Critical response

Prof Ken Scambray (University of La Verne) suggested it redefines Italian-American literature by moving away from its stereotypical images, praising its realism and ability to find beauty in the quotidian.[1]

Editions

  • Luigi Fontanella. Angels of Youth. Translators Carol Lettieri & Irene Marchegiani Jones. Grand Terrace, California: Xenos Books. p. 170. ISBN 978-1-879378-43-8. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
gollark: I'm defining "usable" as "has WiFi, performance competitive with my fairly recent Intel laptop, has usable high performance GPU".
gollark: I mean, nothing usable.
gollark: I'm pretty sure that's... nothing...?
gollark: Yes, the accursedly C-involving kernel with constant vulnerabilities.
gollark: I do *also* need something which actually supports my hardware and software.

References

  1. Scambray, Ken. "The Book Review: Angels of Youth by Luigi Fontanella". L'Italo Americano. Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  2. Ferroni, Giulio, "A proposito di Ceres di Luigi Fontanella: tre interventi di Roberto Deidier, Giulio Ferroni e Valerio Magrelli", RIVISTA DI STUDI ITALIANI 15:2, Dec 1997
  3. "Luigi Fontanella". Stony Brook university website. Archived from the original on 12 September 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.