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Boredom

by Alberto Moravia
language: english
Publisher: New York Review Books, July of 2004 ‧
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Boredom, the story of a failed artist and pampered son of a rich family who becomes dangerously attached to a young model, examines the complex relations between money, sex, and imperiled masculinity.

Boredom

by Alberto Moravia

Property Description
ISBN: 9781590171219
Publisher: New York Review Books
Release Date: July of 2004
Language: English
Dimensions: 126 x 204 x 17 mm
Cover: Softcover
Pages: 336
Format: Book
Categories: Books in English > Fiction > Fiction
EAN: 9781590171219

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alberto Moravia

Alberto Moravia, pseudonym of Alberto Pincherle, was born in Rome in 1907 into a prosperous middle-class family. As a child, he contracted bone tuberculosis, spending a total of five years in sanatoriums and at home, between the ages of 9 and 17. Perhaps this isolation, which fostered a voracious appetite for reading, explains the writer's precocious literary talent. He contributed to newspapers at a very young age, and at 22 he published his first novel— The Indifferent Ones — which had a great impact on the Italian literary atmosphere of the time. The markedly anti-fascist and anti-bourgeois slant of the work contributed to this, in the context of an Italy that had just witnessed the signing of the concordat between Benito Mussolini and the Vatican. Moreover, Moravia's works were quickly banned by the dictatorial regime and placed on the Vatican's Index of Prohibited Books for offending moral values ​​and good customs. Coming from a Jewish family and a left-wing activist, he lived in the United States during World War II. In 1941 he married Elsa Morante, also a writer, and the marriage lasted for almost twenty years. He returned to Italy after the conflict and resumed his activism, while his prestige abroad increased and several of his works were adapted for film by great filmmakers, such as Bernardo Bertolucci (The Conformist) and Jean-Luc Godard (DisdainFrom the 1960s onwards, he spent a good part of his life traveling, which resulted in, among other publications, An Idea from India (India ink, 2008) and Letters from the SaharaAlbert Moravia died in Rome in 1990.

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