Zerilli-Marimò Prize for Italian Fiction

The Zerilli-Marimò / City of Rome Prize for Italian Fiction is an Italian American literary award funded by Baroness Mariuccia Zerilli-Marimò. The award winning book is selected as being especially worthy of the attention of readers in North America and the English-speaking world. The prize is sponsored by various organizations, among which New York University, Harvard University, and the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The jury consists of 70 members who are fluent in Italian, but of non-European nationality.[1]

Winners of the award

gollark: As you can see, the definition of the burrito monad is trivial.
gollark: ```haskelldata Burrito a = Burrito ainstance Monad Burrito where (Burrito x) >>= f = f x return = Burrito```
gollark: *awaits lecture from one of the Supreme Lambdas on how this is completely wrong and how I should be ashamed of this view of monads*
gollark: I consider them basically just containery things with `bind` and `return`.
gollark: Yes, exactly, that's why it's here...

References

  1. Zerilli-Marimò Prize for Italian Fiction, Italian Studies, New York University. Retrieved 2008-09-02.
  2. Celati G.: Cinema naturale. Feltrinelli Editore, 2001: back matter. ISBN 978-88-07-01585-4.
  3. "NYU's Zerilli-Marimo Prize for Italian Fiction Awarded to Giorgio Van Straten for Il Mio Nome a Memoria." The Italian Voice 2000-10-26. Partially retrieved 2008-08-28.
  4. 2001 Zerilli-Marimò Prize for Italian Fiction Awarded to Roberto Pazzi. The Italian Voice 2001-11-08. Partially retrieved 2008-09-02.
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