o Antonio Tabucchi was born in Pisa in 1943 and died in Lisbon in 2012. A master of short fiction, he won the Prix MUdicis Etranger for Indian Nocturne, the Italian PEN Prize for Requiem- A Hallucination, the Aristeion European Literature Prize for Pereira Declares, and was named a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government. Together with his wife, Maria JosU de Lancastre, Tabucchi translated much of the work of Fernando Pessoa into Italian. Tabucchi's works include The Flying Creatures of Fra Angelico, and The Woman of Porto Pim (Archipelago), Little Misunderstandings of No Importance, Letter from Casablanca, and The Edge of the Horizon (New Directions). ao Translator Bios ao Antonio Romani and Martha Cooley's translations of poems by Italian poet Giampiero Neri have been published in AGNI, Atlanta Review, PEN America, A Public Space, and elsewhere. ao Martha Cooley is the author of two novels, The Archivist and Thirty-Three Swoons. Her works of short fiction, poetry, and essays have appeared in PEN America, The Common, A Public Space, and elsewhere.
"In this collection of short stories, the late Tabucchi (The
Flying Creatures of Fra Angelico) plays with philosophical
themes such as the circularity of memory and time, depicting
characters who struggle to preserve voices they can no longer hear
and to communicate these echoes to others. ... Exposing memory for
the fiction it is, these wonderful stories produce a melancholic
nostalgia even as they undermine it." -- Publishers Weekly
"A pensive, beautifully written meditation on personhood and
nationhood in the new age of European unity ... many of the
characters in this joined collection-something more than short
stories but not quite a novel-are stateless and uprooted; they come
from somewhere else, and they're never quite at home where they are
... A pleasure ... for fans of modern European literature." --
Kirkus Reviews
"There is in Tabucchi's stories the touch of the true magician, who
astonishes us by never trying too hard for his subtle, elusive and
remarkable effects." -- The San Francisco Examiner
"Tabucchi's work has an almost palpable sympathy for the
oppressed." -- The New York Times
"As with all fine writers, it is remarkable how the same themes
surface effortlessly in Tabucchi's work even when the material is
quite new. . . In particular there is an engaging dialogue between
two Italians under sunshades on a Croatian beach: a sick man in his
forties and a precocious young girl. Gradually, it emerges that
neither was born in Italy: the girl, unsurprisingly called Isabel,
is from Peru while the man was born "in a country that's no longer
on any maps"; yet both culturally are entirely Italian. The man, an
invalided soldier, is dying of uranium poisoning while the girl is
facing the breakup of her family. Nevertheless the entire
conversation unfolds with great charm, playfulness, and decorum in
a summery Mediterranean haze. It is a welcome return to Tabucchi at
his best." - The New York Review of Books
"By now the appearance of a new novel by Antonio Tabucchi is a
literary event." -- World Literature Today
"I found myself cheered by [Tabucchi's] rich, occlusive writing,
filled with flecks of gold, panning the river bottom of our lives,
finding here and there scintillating bits, some deviously
interesting characters, all deftly laid out on the page." -RALPH
Magazine
"Poignant, philosophical... Tabucchi has done the seemingly
impossible with this collection: in an era of fast-paced plots,
Tabucchi's characters, language, and very form force readers to
pause and reflect on one small, powerful moment. It's a pleasure
each step of the way." - Laura Farmer, The Gazette
"Fluid and airy... Contemplative and without affection, these
stories would be well accompanied by a wistful gaze out a window -
an enjoyable memento mori on a warm summer day which will soon fade
into all the others." - Ruairi Casey, Totally Dublin
"History, personal or collective, weighs on everyone in these
stories, sculpting their inner lives. And yet, Tabucchi suggests,
an unlikely transcendence is possible." -- Philip Graham,
Fiction Writers Review
"Each of Tabucchi's pieces feels like a treasure, a small gift or
sweet to be unwrapped gleefully... This was an author who
understood that a great part of life is spent not doing but
envisioning what one could do and remembering what one has done.
"Time Ages in a Hurry" is a collection that showcases not only
Tabucchi's intelligence but also his wisdom." - The Harvard
Crimson
"[Tabucchi's] prose creates a deep, near-profound and sometimes
heart-wrenching nostalgia and constantly evokes the pain of
recognizing the speed of life's passing which everyone knows but
few have the strength to accept ... Wonderfully thought-provoking
and beautiful." -- Alan Cheuse, NPR's All Things
Considered
"Poetic and prophetic... I thoroughly enjoyed this collection of
stories, all having central characters reliving an important, and
life changing memory. The reflection upon time and place captured
in a melancholic style with depth of clarity around quite simple
everyday occurrences." - Messenger's
Booker
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