Rights List 2012
Transcription
Rights List 2012
Rights List 2012 Abate Carmine Accardo Salvatore Angela Alberto Bahrami Ramin Bevilacqua Alberto Bernardini Irene Bignardi Daria Caferri Francesca Camilleri Andrea Cattaneo Arturo Cavanna Alberto Cazzullo Aldo Cerrini Simonetta Clerici Antonella, Spisni Alessandra e Barzetti Sergio Colombo Maria Paola Conti Guido Costamagna Luisella Culicchia Giuseppe Dalai Michele De Giovanni Maurizio Defilippi Alessandro De Crescenzo Luciano Fubini Federico Fusini Nadia Frale Barbara Genovesi Fabio Giordano Paolo Godart Louis Gratteri Nicola-Nicaso Antonio Guccini Francesco La collina del vento 4 Il miracolo della musica 59 L’amore ai tempi dell’antica Roma 36 Come Bach mi ha salvato la vita 64 Roma Califfa18 Bambini e basta 60 L’acustica perfetta6 Il Paradiso ai piedi delle donne 62 Il diavolo, certamente22 La notte inglese8 L’uomo che non contava i giorni 23 L’Italia s’è ridesta50 L’Apocalisse dei Templari 37 La prova del cuoco67 Il negativo dell’amore7 Il grande fiume Po 20 Noi che costruiamo gli uomini 63 Venere in metro 9 Le più strepitose cadute della mia vita 10 Il metodo del Coccodrillo 12 La paziente n. 9 26 Foss’e a Madonna 44 Noi siamo la rivoluzione 52 La figlia del sole 19 La lingua segreta degli Dei 28 Versilia Rock City 11 Il corpo umano 3 41 La Tavola Doria Dire e non dire 47 Dizionario delle cose perdute 24 Littizzetto Luciana Martini Carlo Maria Messori Vittorio Niemeyer Oscar Oddati Nicola Odifreddi Piergiorgio Oggero Margherita Palmieri Francesco Parsi Maria Rita Pedretti Bruno Peronaci Sonia Piperno Alessandro Quilici Folco Rampini, Federico Ranno Tea Ratzinger Josef Ravasi Gianfranco Rosi Francesco - Tornatore Giuseppe Ruini Camillo - Galli Andrea Santagata Marco Signorini Alfonso Sullam Anna Vera Tamà Patrizia Tamimi Widad Tani Cinzia Tesio Silvia Torregrossa Giuseppina Verga Massimiliano Villari Rosario Wertmueller Lina Nuovo titolo 68 Colti da stupore 57 Bernadette non ci ha ingannato 54 Il mondo è ingiusto 40 Il teorema dell’a corda 29 Diamo spazio al tempo 43 Un colpo all’atezza del cuore 30 Il libro napoletano dei morti 21 Doni 45 La sinfonia delle cose mute 14 Divertiti cucinando 66 Inseparabili 5 Relitti e tesori 42 Voi avete gli orologi, noi abbiamo il tempo 53 La sposa vermiglia 16 Pensieri di fede per una vita felice 56 58 Guida ai naviganti Mi chiamano professore ma faccio il cinematografo 49 Intervista su Dio 55 Dante 38 Amore, folle amore 35 Undici stelle risplendenti 31 La profezia di Michelangelo 32 Il caffè delle donne 17 Il bacio della dionea 33 Piacere, io sono Gauss34 Panza e prisenza 25 Zigulì 65 Un sogno di libertà 39 Tutto a posto e niente in ordine 48 1 2 LITERARY FICTION 310 pages October 2012 It’s been a long silence - nearly five years. The expectations aroused, in me as much as anyone, by the success of The Solitude of Prime Numbers seemed for some time an insurmountable obstacle, and made me very selective about the subject of my second book. None of the ideas I’ve toyed with seemed capable of producing comparable emotions; I began to wonder if I’d ever find a subject. I decided to wait. I didn’t want to avoid the difficulties by publishing a slight work to release the tension, or by other indirect methods. I wanted my second book to be a novel, and one that would finally make me feel I deserved to be in the place where events had put me. In December 2010 I travelled to Afghanistan with some Italian troops, intending to write a brief report on my experiences. As chance or destiny would have it, I f ound myself in a Forward Operating Base little known to civilians in the southern region of Gulistan, in the middle of a desert surrounded by mountains. At FOB ‘Ice’ - that was its name - I met young men of my own age. I realized that, if every generation has its war, the war in Afghanistan is my generation’s war. I imagined what it would be like to be in the soldiers’s place in that paradoxical context, and when I returned home I started writing The Human Body. The power of the stimuli I’d received in the ten days I’d spent there proved greater than any fear or doubt, and carried me through to the end, a year and a half later. The result is a war novel, or rather a novel about war, in its multiple incarnations: war in the literal sense - the conflict in Afghanistan; the war of intimate relationships, both emotional and familial; and the invisible, highly destructive war that we wage against ourselves. Each of the many characters in the story faces the painful transition from being young to finally discovering that they‘re adults, different people, with responsibilities they’d rather not have and don’t feel ready to take on. After the explosive effect that my first book had on my life, there was no more personal subject I could have dealt with. I hope the enthusiasm I’ve put into this book has an equally explosive effect on you. Paolo Giordano Paolo Giordano is the youngest-ever winner of Italy’s prestigious literary award, the Premio Strega, for his debut novel The Solitude of Prime Numbers (2008), a massive international bestseller, which has been translated into forty languages worldwide. He has a PhD in theoretical physics and lives in Turin. 3 Paolo Giordano Il corpo umano The human Body LITERARY FICTION 264 pages February 2012 Carmine Abate La collina del vento The Windy Hill An engrossing, poetical novel set on the shores of the Ionian Sea. One day in April 1929 the renowned archeologist Paolo Orsi from Trento asks for permission to dig around the “Collina del Vento” (the windy hill) along the Ionian Coastline of Calabria in the toes of Italy on the trail of the ancient and mythological city of Krimisa. Surprisingly the owner of the land reacts very violently and sends him packing in front of his child, a young boy who will then become the guardian of the hill and of its secrets. Many years later another expedition tries again and this time it will be the wind that uncovers the secrets of the hills and of the large and courageous family that protected it for generations. 4 A morality tale, a domestic drama and a paean to the beauty which still exists in the hills in the Southern part of Italy. A strong plot as it backtracks through events; a lyrical and poetical novel without being sentimental. Carmine Abate, Carfizzi, 1954, migrated to Germany as a young man and now lives and teaches in the Trento region. He made his debut with a collection of short stories, then ventured into poetry and fiction. His books include Tra i due mari, Il ballo tondo, Gli anni veloci, and Il mosaico del tempo grande, all published by Mondadori. LITERARY FICTION 360 pages February 2012 Alessandro Piperno Inseparabili Inseparable A compelling human story PREMIO 2012 Inseparable, like love birds that can only survive with each other’s company – that’s what the Pontecorvo brothers, Filippo and Samuel, have always been. The two are as different as they are complementary. But their destinies seem to switch places as something begins to crack. Lazy Filippo goes on to become a world-renowned cartoonist, a star for fans who wants to join “charm and civil outrage, sex appeal and humanitarian protest”. While the promisingly brilliant Samuel is faced with doom at work and in his love life. Alessandro Piperno returns with the Pontecorvo family in the eagerly awaited follow-up to previous Persecuzione. This second book (which can also be read independently) continues the story of Professor Pontecorvo’s children, barely teenager at the time of the 1980s scandal told in the previous book and now in their late thirties. An extraordinary novel and a perennial source of linguistic delight. Alessandro Piperno (born in 1972) is the author of the celebrated Con le peggiori intenzioni (2005) and Persecuzione (2010). Among his foreign publishers: Liana Levi, Contact, Lumen, Fischer, Patakis, Corpus, Europa, Presença, Alma Littera, Proszynski i s-ka. “Piperno is 39, he smokes a pipe like Simenon, reads Philip Roth and writes about Proust, And you can tell.” Le Magazine Littéraire 5 LITERARY FICTION 204 pages November 2012 Daria Bignardi L’acustica perfetta Perfect acoustics What do we keep hidden even from those who love us? One cold morning in December, around Christmas, the alarm clock goes off unexpectedly on the nightstand of Arno Cange, a cellist who plays for La Scala. The house is immersed in silence, the children are asleep in their beds, the table is set for breakfast. But where’s Sara? She is always the first to get up and take care of everything… From a laconic letter, Arno comes to learn that Sara has left after thirteen years of marriage: she doesn’t say where, why, or for how long. Thrown against his will into the small inconveniences of everyday life, Arno will discover many things: that his kraut mother is terrible at taking care of her grandchildren, while his father Guelfo, whom 6 he always thought of as an irresponsible hippie, has noticed much and knows what’s happening. Arno will find the ideal housemate in Sara’s father, the silent and pragmatic Rino, and, to his surprise, will finally come to know his children, whom he always loved but never spent enough time with while Sara was around. But most of all he will have to come to terms with his wife’s secrets, tucked away in a past that will slowly be revealed to him, one step at a time, through an itinerary that has the depth of a Bildungsroman or a noir mystery. Will Arno ever see cross paths with ruthless and tender Sara again, the only woman he ever loved? Daria bignardi, (born in Ferrara) journalist and screenwriter, is the star of the popular TV talk-show “Le invasioni barbariche” and a columnist for “Vanity Fair”. In 2009 her debut novel Non vi lascero’ orfani was a poignant literary case with 150,000 copies sold. In 2010 she has published Un karma pesante. LITERARY FICTION 336 pages January 2012 Maria Paola Colombo Il negativo dell’amore The Negative of Love A powerful and tender debut What kind of future can you expect if you survive the night your mother threw herself in the river, with you in her arms? Cica lives in a small town in northern Italy, she is seven years old and has two scars on her back like the marks of torn-off wings. And what kind of future can you expect if you’re born with trisomy of chromosome 21? Little Walker has Down’s syndrome and is the eldest child of a picturesque Apulian family. His normal yet extraordinary parents do their best to learn, to adapt to his pace and his rather dreamy slowness. Ten years later Cica and Walker are two teenagers having their first experience of love. They were born a thousand kilometres apart and they don’t know each other; they don’t know that they share the same innocence and the same courage. One warm, almost summery October night their destinies intersect: the encounter is explosive and revealing. Maria Paola Colombo (born in 1979) has worked in a bank since the age of twenty and is convinced that the liberation fiction brings is the key to great happiness. Rights sold in Germany (Karl Blessing), Netherlands (Prometheus), Israel (Kinneret) and France (Presse de la Cité). 7 LITERARY FICTION 204 pages April 2012 Arturo Cattaneo La notte inglese The English Night A midsummer’s night at cambridge university The Cambridge Society Dinner is the university’s traditional gala event. As the formality gradually fades, the community is overcome by an irresistible wave of eroticism and intoxication. When love pokes through the surface, it is mocking and unattainable. On such a night, the young and brilliant Italian protagonist, secretly tormented by the shame of his own virginity, at long last meets a woman. Not the one he’s always dreamed of – it’s a thoroughly unexpected encounter in a whirlwind of surprises. A brilliant comedy in five acts, each one a stronger ethylic potion – Sherry, Red Wine, Port and Madeira, High Spirits – until the final act, Milk, when the magical 8 night comes to an end and at breakfast Riccardo, still feeling the mesmerizing effects, reflects on a lifelong question: what changes with love’s onslaught? Arturo Cattaneo is a journalist and a professor of English Literature at Cattolica University in Milano. Ci vediamo a settembre, his first novel, was released in 2010. LITERARY FICTION 264 pages September 2012 Giuseppe Culicchia Venere in metrò Venus in metro Super-fit, Super-career oriented, SuperSexy, SuperMom, SuperWoman Bea is thirty-eight, she is a size ten, she lives in downtown Milan, everyday she visits the Blond Salad website to decide what to wear, she has a career oriented husband, a lover whose Facebook status says “in love,” a son who attends a Steiner school, two girlfriends named Ilaria and Solaria, an iPhone, an iPod, an iPad, and a psychoanalyst who says only these words at the end of every session: “that’ll be three-hundred euros.” Everything is impeccable, or so it would seem. Yet suddenly something breaks. At first it is a small crack, which will spread like a spider web and crumble Bea’s every certainty: the loss of her job at the communication agency, an unexpected sentimental impasse, 9 a blocked credit card, a son who shows clear signs of distress… In an irresistible satirical vein, Culicchia brings to life a character that is actually deeply tragic, caught in a web of lies and exaggerations that reveals the most hypocritical side of the bourgeois at the beginning of the millennium, celebrating both its rituals and its decline. After hitting the rock bottom of the crisis, he shows how we can resume life by renouncing everything and be the richer for it. Giuseppe Culicchia (born in Turin in 1965) published his short stories in the anthology Papergang Under 25 III (1990), edited by Pier Vittorio Tondelli. His first novel Tutti giù per terra (1994) won the Mont Blanc prize and the Grinzane Cavour Prize and was translated in France by Albin Michel and in Germany by DTV. With Mondadori he published Brucia la città (2009) and Ameni inganni (2010). LITERARY FICTION 300 pages March 2012 Michele Dalai Le più strepitose cadute della mia vita The Most Spectacular Falls of my Life A triumphant story of a failure Antonio Fluenke is a twentynine-year-old singer. Educated in the best international schools, he has an eccentric mother who lives in Romagna and a sensitive, depressed German father. He also has a problem which no doctor has managed to solve – he keeps falling over. In the most absurd and illogical situations, he loses his balance and falls down, laughing uncontrollably. His goal is to set up a boy band, the Italian answer to Take That, and perform at Sanremo, the most prestigious songfest in Italy. A host of memorable characters crosses his path and – captured in a series of moving, surreal ‘interludes’ – some great historical 10 figures who have had the misfortune to fall down in public like Antonio: Margaret Thatcher on a state visit to China; Pope John Paul II alone on a slippery floor; Michael Spinks, the undisputed world champion, in front of Mike Tyson; Enrico Berlinguer... A funny, inventively written and more than slightly odd first novel. Michele Dalai (born in 1973) after working in his family’s publishing house, in 2010 was co-founder of the publishing house add. A professional journalist, he writes for several newspapers and has worked on radio and TV. LITERARY FICTION 216 pages February 2012 Fabio Genovesi Versilia Rock City A mordantly funny novel Following the success of Esche vive, one of the most brilliant and hilarious novels in 2011, here’s a new, completely reworked version of Fabio Genovesi’s debut novel (a small literary case in 2008). With his usual irony Fabio takes a behind-the-scenes look at Forte dei Marmi and Versilia, the exclusive Toscana seaside resort where he was born and where he currently lives. Through the lives of four people searching their place in the world the novel marks the contrast between the luxury and glitz in summer and the ordinary life of local townspeople forced to live in a perennial playground, beyond the stereotypes of the snobbish beachsets and the celebrated night-clubs. A hilarious gaze on the lives of others set in the fashionable riviera resort. “If John Irving had an Italian son, it would be named Fabio Genovesi” Schnuess, Bonn “Genovesi gives the perception of his three characters properly, and makes their bumpling into heartbreaking and hilarious events.” Elle NL Fabio Genovesi (born in 1974 in Forte dei Marmi) is the author of the novel Esche vive (2011), rights of which were sold in Germany (Luebbe), Netherlands (Signatuur), France (Fayard), Spain (Espasa Calpe), Brasil (Bertrand) and Israel (Keter). He is a regular contributor to “Vanity Fair” and to the book supplement to “Corriere della Sera” - that is, whenever he has time off from his main activity: fishing. 11 LITERARY thriller 252 pages April 2012, Maurizio de Giovanni Il metodo del coccodrillo The Crocodile Method A mysterious serial killer in naples Inspector Lojacono is punished with a transfer from Sicily to Naples, where his new colleagues ignore him and his superiors make sure he is not given any important assignments. He supposedly accepted bribe money from the mafia, the reason for his exile. Suddenly Naples is rocked by the murder of three teenagers – of different ages and backgrounds, their bodies are found in three different districts of the city, each with a lone bullet wound. Only Lojacono is able to make a connection between the crimes – the key being a tear-stained handkerchief left by the killer at each scene. Indeed, the newspapers begin referring to the murderer as 12 “The Crocodile”. Chaotic, dazzling and damned Naples is the setting in which two solitary figures face off in a battle of determination and wits – the cop and the killer, mirror images. A suspenseful story and a well-plotted and intelligent thriller. Maurizio de Giovanni (born in 1958 in Naples) is the creator of Inspector Ricciardi, protagonist in a series of best-selling novels published by Fandango and Einaudi. Rights sold in UK (Little,Brown), US (Europa Editions), Spain (Roja y Negra/RHM), Germany (Kindler), France (Fleuve Noir), Denmark (Art People). LITERARY FICTION 192 pages April 2012, Massimo Lolli Le cinque regole del corteggiamento The Five Rules of Courtship An exilarating look at smalltown life and love Each year Bertilla and Maria Cira meet up. Both friends love their children very much, but are bored out of their skulls with their husbands. Joining the two old pals are Roberta, Patrizia and Giulia. The gang has one goal in mind: to engage in sexual exploits without letting the others in on their game. Moreno Donadello is a washedup bard from the women’s teen years, once a hero of cinema and TV commercials, maker of the cult movie Un mercoledì da terroni. The only soul in the world that loves and admires him is his clumsy 15-year-old nephew Matteo, an aspiring poet. The highpoint of this year’s romp sees Bertilla and Maria Cira in action at the Bat Club for Nostalgia Night, where they encounter some very unusual characters – horny granddads, old bags with dyed hair and gilt shoes, along with Moreno and Matteo. Massimo Lolli (born in Milano in 1960) has published a string of novels. In 2009 Mondadori released his Il lunedì arriva sempre di domenica pomeriggio. 13 LITERARY FICTION 288 pages September 2012 Bruno Pedretti La sinfonia delle cose mute The symphony of silent things The universal power of music in four stories tied together by the Beethoven’s Ninth. On March 29th 1827, in Vienna, the entire city seems to have come together to say goodbye to Ludwig Van Beethoven. Gerhard, the composer’s faithful friend, is also among the crowd. He is the only one who shared his friend’s final painful days. In 1872, the young Mori Noboru returns to Tokyo after having spent five years in Europe studying its “barbaric” culture. His discovery of Western music was so powerful that he decided to buy a piano and have it shipped to Japan. However, Noboru’s desire to renovate his country’s culture is met by the anger of the traditionalists, who opposed Japan’s opening up to the West. 14 1947. Shortly after his denazification process, the great conductor Wilhem Furtwangler finally returns to Berlin. There, he receives the visit of a Japanese man, Abe Takeshi Beethoven, Mori Noboru’s nephew, who tells him the magical and fascinating story of the first performance of Beethoven’s Ninth in Japan. In a South American city at the beginning of the 2000s, preparations are made for the last concert of another great conductor: Jonas Weger. The maestro will conduct a very unique version of Beethoven’s Ninth, for on stage there will be the deaf boys of the “Silencio Musical” choir. Bruno Pedretti, writer and essayist, lives in Milan. In addition to books on art and aesthetics, he has published the novels Charlotte. La morte e la fanciulla (Giuntina, 1998) and Patmos (Marinotti, 2008). He teaches theory of art and architecture at the University of Lugano. LITERARY FICTION 228 pages October 2012 Ugo Riccarelli L’amore graffia il mondo Love Scratches The World A literary gem A compelling novel and a strong emotional story, skillfully written by a wonderful writer with a gift for characterization. The daughter of a stationmaster and a peasant, Signorina was born at the beginning of the 20s in small town in central Italy. In her mother’s opinion, reading and writing were not activities suitable for a young girl. Nevertheless, her father decides to send her to school. After the fifth grade, however, Signorina has to give up her studies, in spite of her teacher’s advice, who recognizes her intelligence and her potential. The encounter with a mysterious Asian man, who with two quick movements of the hand can transform a swatch of material into an origami dress for a doll, provides Signorina’s creativity with an unexpected outlet. She learns to sew and, as if by magic, creates beautiful clothes with a few snipes of her scissors. However, her life is struck by war and love: she gives birth to a gravely ill son, to whom she dedicates all her energy, convinced that love can overcome anything, fix everything. Mixing autobiographical and historical elements with the imagination of a great writer, Riccarelli paints for the reader the unforgettable portrait of an exceptional woman. Ugo Riccarelli (born near Turin in 1954) lives in Rome and made his debut in 1995 with the novel Le scarpe appese al cuore. Mondadori has published L’angelo di Coppi (2001), Il dolore perfetto (2004, which won the 2004 Strega Prize ), Un mare di nulla (2006), Comallamore (2009), La Repubblica di un solo giorno ( 2011). Among his foreign publishers: Hanser, De Arbeiderspers, Plon, Maeva, Kastaniotis, Munhakdongne, Baltos Lankos. 15 LITERARY FICTION 372 pages February 2012 Tea Ranno La sposa vermiglia The Vermilion Bride An unforgettable tale of love and honour Sicily, 1926. Vincenzina Sparviero is the attractive but fragile daughter in a noble Sicilian family. In town they murmur that she doesn’t have the strength to become a mother. She is presumed sterile, but old Don Ottavio Licata doesn’t seem to give a hoot. A marriage of convenience is arranged between the meek and obedient “dove” and the sixtysomething fascist and mafioso. One spring afternoon, however, once their engagement has been made public, Vincenzina suddenly discovers love in the amber eyes of Filippo Gonzales. In the slow and inexorable descent that leads to the fateful wedding day, tragedy looms… The story of a burning passion 16 brought to life by an unforgettable cast of characters: in a Sicilian landscape rich of all its flavors, the author masterfully plumbs the depths of love and grief. A vibrant intriguing book enriched by a passionate love story. Tea Ranno (born in 1963 in Siracusa) holds a degree in Law. She is the author of Cenere (2006) and In una lingua che non so più dire (2007), both published by e/o. LITERARY FICTION 300 pages September 2012 Widad Tamimi Il caffè delle donne Women’s Coffee Two worlds, two cultures, two roots that must grow together to become a woman Coffee is a mainstay in Qamar’s life: the robust espresso drunk by her mother, softened with a splash of milk, the way her husband takes it, or boiled three times, bitter and spiced with cardamom, the way she used to drink in Jordan. From an early age, Qamar found herself suspended between two worlds: she would spend winters, her everyday life, in Milan and summers in Amman, Jordan, living with her father’s Muslim family, playing in the street with a gang of rambunctious kids, until she turned thirteen, officially becoming a woman. Removed from all contact with the opposite sex, Qamar begins to painfully realize the differences between the two cultures to which she belongs. And yet, in the white mornings spent with the women of her family, she is initiated into the absolute magic of the ancient coffee ritual: grandmothers, aunts, sisters, and sisters-in-law gathered in the living room, chatting, sipping the scolding beverage and preparing to learn their destiny. However, only one of them is chosen each day to have the bottom of her cup read by Khalto Sherin, who sees, in the grinds, the secrets of the heart and the future. Years later, Qamar will feel the need to return to her roots and to remember the words she heard long ago, that day she saw her own life in the bottom of a coffee cup… Widad Tamimi was born in 1981. She is the daughter of a Palestinian refugee who fled the Israeli occupation of 1967. Her mother comes from a Jewish family that escaped to New York during World War II. She grew up in Milan. Women’s Coffee is her first novel. 17 LITERARY FICTION 252 pages March 2012, Alberto Bevilacqua Roma Califfa Caliphal Rome Rome described by a great Italian writer “Rome, the bizarre”, “Rome, the venerable”, “Rome, the legendary”, “Rome, the lowdown”, “Rome, the multifaceted”... Roma Califfa is, and could not be otherwise, the Rome of Alberto Bevilacqua. Born in Parma but an adopted Roman, Bevilacqua has for many years been a columnist on all things Roman for the Italian daily “Il Messaggero”. Here is a collection of some of his most witty and curious tales, brimming with anger, nostalgia, melancholy and inspiration. Memories from his younger days when he worked the local crime beat for “Il Messaggero”, reflections on ancient and medieval Rome, the post-war boom years and the 18 glory days of Cinecittà, as well as several scathing pieces on the torments of contemporary Rome. He brings alive places, people and conversations with famous actors, such as Ugo Tognazzi and Alberto Sordi, directors such as Orson Welles and Federico Fellini, and writers Giancarlo Fusco, Domenico Rea, Ennio Flaiano. An intriguing and poignant portrait of a city. Alberto Bevilacqua, born in Parma in 1934, is one of Italy’s best known authors and the author of a large number of novels, all bestsellers and winners of Italy’s most prestigious literary prizes. LITERARY FICTION 168 pages October 2012 Nadia Fusini La figlia del sole The Daughter of the Sun A daredevil life in the name of writing: the life of Katherine Mansfield Born in New Zealand at the beginning of the 20th Century, Katherine Mansfield moves to England, her second home, where she spends her brief life traveling, loving, and writing without holding back. First stricken by syphilis and then by tuberculosis, she is close to the most important intellectuals of her day. At the same time, she is on eternal exile; she is eternally “out of place.” Katherine writes extraordinary pages that will make her one of the most beloved narrators of the century: as she writes she wastes away, and writing keeps her alive, as if ceasing to write implied surrendering to the evil that eats at her. Hers is a brief life, extremely unhappy but alight with the flames of an absolute vitality, with the courage of a girl who knows how to face the vertigo of an existence lived without holding back – all of this constitutes an incredible mirror against which we should measure ourselves. Nadia Fusini entrusts two siblings, a brother and sister, with the task of narrating Katherine’s story in a moving, fast-paced dialogue, of telling how this absolute girl finally found peace in the most eccentric place in the world, a few miles outside Paris. Nadia Fusini teaches English literature at the Università La Sapienza in Rome. She gained the attention of critics and readers first through her vast production of essays and then through her novels, among which Mondadori has published L’amor vile ( 1999), Lo specchio di Elisabetta (2002), I volti dell’amore (2003), Possiedo la mia anima (2006), L’amore necessario (2008). In 2011 Mondadori has also published her monograph entitled Di vita si muore. Lo spettacolo delle passioni nel teatro di Shakespeare. 19 NARRATIVE NON-FICTION 444 pages August 2012 Guido Conti Il grande fiume Po The great po river A literary journey along the wonderful and sometimes unknown path of the longest Italian river A journey from the source of the Po to its delta. Landscapes, moods, encounters, bizarre characters, the reflections of a traveler who narrates his own land with pietas and humor, retracing the history of the literature born on the banks of the great Po river. The myths blossom in different historical times, from the classical era of Virgil, to the theater of the Este courts in the 1400s, to today, surprising the reader at every turn. A concrete journey through the imagination of a river, the Po, that touches cities and areas such as Turin, Piacenza, Parma, Reggio, Modena, Cremona, Mantova, Ferrara, all the way to the delta, tracing the blue line of a path 20 that unearths the fables of Ovid, Virgil, Petrarch, Folengo, Ariosto, juxtaposing them against today’s writers. We begin with the Turin of Pavese, Calvino, Soldati, Salgari, and Gozzano, then move to the Bassa [lowlands] of Guareschi, Zavattini, Celati, Cavazzoni and Pederiali, and finally reach Bassani’s Ferrara and the extraordinary poems of Raffaello Baldini, Tonino Guerra, and Federico Fellini’s Rimini. An adventure which digs into history, searching for the sources of a river’s tales and aims at reconstructing a human and literary geography, both modern and ancient, for the new millennium. Guido Conti was born in 1965 in Parma, where he lives and works. He is the author of two literary novels published by Guanda, Il coccodrillo sull’altare (1998) and I cieli di vetro (1999). With Mondadori he published in 2010 the delicate novel of a female friendship Le mille bocche della nostra sete, whose rights were sold in the Netherlands (De Bezige Bij) and in Spain (Suma de Letras). NARRATIVE NON-FICTION 192 pages September 2012 Francesco Palmieri Il libro napoletano dei morti The Neapolitan Book of the Dead An enthralling reconstruction of the history of Naples: the prequel to Gomorra The time between the unification of Italy and the First World War was the darkest and most marvelous era in the history of Naples. The adventurous tales of foreign captains defending the Bourbons interweave with the stories of the Camorra, Italy’s oldest criminal organization, and its influence over the Italian state during the years of the Belle Epoque. Criminals hide among artists, singers, dancers, movers, shakers, and sinister faces. While the Great War wages on, a shocking murder in the town galleria reveals that the Camorra is transforming into a stronger, more far-reaching organization: it is the prequel to Gomorra. Main character of this book is the Neapolitan poet, Ferdinando Russo, who narrates the saga as it unfolds. Though he was once involved in the underworld of organized crime, complete with money and women to spare, Russo renounced his ties to take up journalism. But once he begins to document his experiences with the crime ring, he is drawn back into its grasp and must once again decide where his loyalties lay. Francesco Palmieri (born in Naples in 1962) is a renowned journalist, having written Sole, Luna e Talia. Magia e misteri a Napoli (1984) and Vite pericolose: Uomini e fantasmi delle arti marziali (2009). 21 short stories 176 pages January 2012 Andrea Camilleri Il diavolo, certamente The Devil, of Course Thirty-three diabolical short stories A collection of thirty-three short stories of five pages each which form however a choral novel, a “human comedy” on vices and virtues, each story ending in an unexpected, diabolical way. In each tale, the devil plays an unequivocal role, and it’s up to the readers to pronounce the sentence, where there’s good and where there’s evil. Not an easy task. Because these stories, beyond their irresistible amusement, are also rife with unyielding, subtle meditation on the meaning of human destinies, our obsession with deception and appearance, our idea of happiness. An absolute jewel, a “human comedy” and a series of musical variations on the theme of evil, 22 concentrated in pages of stunningly contagious energy. Once again Camilleri displays all the storytelling skills that have made him an internationals bestseller. Andrea Camilleri (born in Porto Empedocle in 1925) is the author of the spectacularly successful Montalbano mystery series and many other novel set in Sicily. His Montalbano series have been made into an Italian TV series. He is one of the most translated Italian authors in the world. LITERARY FICTION 160 pages February 2012 Alberto Cavanna L’uomo che non contava i giorni The Man who didn’t Count the Days A friendship in the name of the sea An old axe master and a young man, his eyes full of fear and desire, who came to Italy on a boat from Tunisia. Unexpectedly the two forge a strong bond, as if age and geography were powerless: they share in common the same passion for the sea. Mohammed helps the old man to complete the construction of a small, lightweight fishing boat that’s solid enough for distant sailing, to take him far from this beautiful land spoiled by the pettiness of men – a land that he loves immensely, but one that has stripped him of his joy. For his part, Mohammed dreams of returning to the amber light and the scents of the African coasts… On a moonlit night, sure hands guide the boat silently to shore: an extraordinary adventure is about to get underway. A gripping, strangely sweet tale, remarkable and exquisitely rendered. This book will break your heart and open your understanding to a very different kind of life in our very same world. Alberto Cavanna, born in 1961 in Albissola, comes from a family of ship builders and craftsmen. He is the author of the novels Bacicio do Tin (2004) and Da bosco e da riviera (2008). Rights sold in France to La Fosse aux Ours. 23 LITERARY FICTION 144 pages February 2012 Francesco Guccini Dizionario delle cose perdute Dictionary of Small Lost Things Guccini’s personal “amarcord” Once upon a time... A journey into our recent past to rediscover the little things that accompanied our childhood and that are now almost forgotten. The author digs into his memory and tribute a great homage to memories and emotions, that seems irremediably lost and to which he gives new voice and life. Each chapter is dedicated to an object, starting from the cover of this little book which recalls a very popular cigarette brand (no longer available). Widely described are the toys of his childhood, a time where Playstation did not exist and children used to play wild on the streets. Other chapters are dedicated to the discovery of chewing gum and of 24 the Flit, a powerful insecticide, the product to kill flies and mosquitoes, a real revolution for the time. Halfway between a novel and a memoir, it’s a sort of amarcord and an insightful meditation on our age where practically everything revolves around speed and convenience. Francesco Guccini (born in Bologna in 1940) is a singersongwriter loved by more than one generation. Among his recent books: Croniche epifaniche (1989), Cittanova blues (2003), Icaro (2008) and Malastagione (2011). UPMARKET COMMERCIAL FICTION 192 pages May 2012 Giuseppina Torregrossa Panza e prisenza Yourself and Your Appetite Crime over dinner Palermo. A blazing hot summer. Two cops who couldn’t be any more different from each other: Sasà, mellow to the point of indolence, and Marò, his old classmate and still his best friend, an alluring and strong-willed woman. During their routine, the chief assigns Sasà the task of hunting down a Mafia boss that has been on the lam for years, while Marò is currently involved in the biggest investigation of her career so far. The two cases evolve in parallel over the weeks, punctuated by Marò’s delicious meals as they talk and discover even more about each other. Before each dinner, Sasà asks her the conventional question, “What can I bring?” Marò replies with flashing eyes, “Nothing, Sasà – just yourself and your appetite.” Each dinner is one step forward for their respective investigations and another step backward in the game of seduction… Giuseppina Torregrossa (born in Palermo in 1956) has worked as a gynecologist for 20 years and she is the author of the bestseller Il conto delle minne (2009), the rights of which were sold in Germany (Hoffmann und Campe), Netherlands (Orlando), France (Lattes), Israel (Kinneret), Spain (Maeva), Turkey (Dogan) and Brasil (Suma de Letras). 25 commercial FICTION 324 pages August 2012 Alessandro defilippi La paziente n. 9 Patient n.9 An alarming thriller set in a lunatic asylum during WW2 Look your killer in the eye and he’ll be damned forever. A young German psychiatrist with piercing blue eyes hides a terrible secret. He works in a massive asylum by the sea, on the Ligurian coast, in a peaceful pine grove where one of his patients is a beautiful and beloved woman who falls prey to a dark demon that compels her to paint strange signs on the wall in her own blood. Suddenly a series of gory murders breaks the normal life, whereas the shadows of the Second World War are looming over everything like the black wings of a great folly. And ECT has just become popular: electroconvulsive therapy. Electroshock. 26 A thriller that plumbs the depths of love and fear staring directly in their eyes. A pageturning novel and at the same time a painful and accurate investigation of the lies of the human mind and of the moral strenght necessary to disclose them. Alessandro Defilippi lives in Turin and is a psychoanalyst . Among his books : Locus anima (1999), Angeli (2002) and Le perdute tracce degli dei [(2008) . In 2011 he participated in the project Il romanzo di Roma (a series of historical novels dedicated to ancient Rome) with the volume Danubio rosso . commercial FICTION 300 pages October 2012 Valerio Evangelisti Gli ultimi giorni della tortuga The last days of the tortuga The last, exhilarating episode in the “Pirate Trilogy” 1697. Imposing fleets sail the Caribbean seas once more. King Louis XIV is engaged in yet another conflict that has drained the State’s coffers. To find the gold necessary to end the Nine Years’ War, he decides to attempt an assault on Cartagena, one of the richest cities of the Spanish empire across the sea. Leading the expedition is admiral De Pointis, who knows that in order to succeed in such a crazy undertaking he must enlist the Filibusta’s help. But the only person capable of assembling the legendary Brothers of the Coasts, scattered across the mountains of the Hispaniola island, is the governor Ducasse, the ex-slave trader, rogue with a heart of gold, and fearless adventurer. The capture of Cartagena will increase the tension between De Pointis and Ducasse, between the Brothers of the Coasts and the Kings’ troops, making for an exciting and unexpected final twist, in which every feud left unresolved throughout the “Pirate Trilogy” – which began with Tortuga (2008), and continued in Veracruz (2009) – will come to an end. Valerio evangelisti (born in 1952 in Bologna), historian, started in 1992 the publication of the series of novel dedicated to the medieval Inquisitor Eymerich – fantastic and tolkeniesque – translated by Rivages, Heyne, Grijalbo, Asa, Conrad, Allfa, Znak, Mlada Fronta . Besides the Eymerich saga, he has published Antracite (2003), Noi saremo tutto ( 2004) , Il collare di fuoco (2006) , Il collare spezzato (2007). He is the editor of the website Carmilla: www. carmillaonline.com. 27 commercial FICTION 372 pages March 2012 Barbara Frale La lingua segreta degli dei The Secret Language of the Gods An archeological expedition in the sahara, in the shadow of nazism Rome, 1938. Alessandro Borghesi, a young mining engineer, is hired to take part in an archeological dig at the Siwah oasis in Egypt. Upon his arrival in Cairo, Borghesi realizes soon enough that the archeological mission is rife with snags. He learns that German professor Hans Brunner, in charge of a previous expedition, had accidentally discovered the existence of oil – half the deposit lying under Italian territory in colonized Libya, the other half in Egypt, now under British control. Remarkable economic and political interests are underlying, as well as the involvement of the beautiful Elisabeth Rosenheim, 28 an Egyptologist and student of Professor Brunner. In love with the young woman, Alessandro learns that Elisabeth, of Hebrew origins, was saved by Brunner from Nazi persecution. In getting to know her, the young Italian engineer discovers that access to oil is not the archeological mission’s only aim. Barbara Frale (born in Viterbo in 1970) is a historian of the Catholic Church and Christian society, an archeologist, paleographer and an expert in ancient documents. She is the author of Il principe e il pescatore (2010). commercial FICTION 296 pages October 2012 Nicola Oddati Il teorema della corda The Rope Theorem University of Naples’s math professor Pietro Maiorana d’Altomonte leads his first investigation It’s the beginning of a new political season for the City of Naples that has stirred enthusiasm and great expectations all over, also thanks to the newly elected and charismatic Mayor. Yet three very suspicious suicides, one after another, upset the government buildings and the upper middle class salons: on top of that all three victims are found hanged. The police commissioner in charge turns to two very unique consultants for help: Agatino Dell’Aquila, a well known lawyer in town, and a friend of his, Pietro Maiorana di Altomonte, a young man with Sicilian origins who teaches mathematics at the University. Even more fascinating international characters – like Pietro Maiorana’s attractive Japanese girlfriend – interact and connect with these two amateur investigators but also local figures from the most traditional and stiff Naples. Each one of them is involved in a cruel power struggle, that takes place on a battlefield made up by great works of art and the archistars’ sites, and bringing to light all those different souls, parallel and interwoven, that have been coexisting since forever in the city. Only math, along with its daring hypotheses, will be able to stop the serial deaths that are suffocating the whole city... Nicola Oddati (Salerno) has been the Alderman for Culture in the town of Naples. This is the first in a series of novels dedicated to math professor Pietro Maiorana d’Altomonte. 29 UPMARKET commercial FICTION 250 pages November 2012 Margherita Oggero Un colpo all’altezza del cuore A shot to the heart Two murders, two investigations, two women. Prof. Camilla Baudino’s latest case One winter morning, after taking her bassethound for a walk, professor Camilla Baudino is on her way to school when she witnesses someone settling a score: at the intersection of two peaceful streets in Turin, a motorcyclist kills, with one shot, the driver of a car stopped at the light. A few hours later, at the police station, commissioner Gaetano Berardi is taking the professor’s statement: the two haven’t seen each other in months, but the memory of the attraction that pushed them dangerously close to love has yet to fade… Not far away, in the quiet town of Chivasso, Francesca – a young hospital doctor – also receives a 30 call from the police. One of her most “loyal” patients has been barbarically slain. Yet fate has it that this isn’t the first homicide to touch Francesca’s life. A new investigation involving the most beloved professor-detective in Italy: intelligent, curious and obsessive, Camilla is pulled in a hundred directions by the demands of husband, child, mother, dog and career, she is a believable and sympathetic figure to most women of a certain age. Oggero’s prose clever, sharp and breezy - describes the human comedy of quotidian reality with a self-irony and humour that makes this mistery more than that, a bittersweet comedy. Margherita Oggero lives in Turin. She has taught in almost all kinds of schools. In 2002 she published her first novel in the Camilla Baudino’s series , La collega tatuata, followed by Una piccola bestia ferita (2003), L’amica americana (2005) and Qualcosa da tenere per sé (2007). All these novels have become highly successful TV-movies. She is also the author of Risveglio a Parigi (2009) and of L’ora di pietra (2011). Among her foreign publishers: Piper, Albin Michel, Ripol, Presença, DVA UPMARKET commercial FICTION 252 pages April 2012 Anna Vera Sullam Undici stelle risplendenti Eleven Shining Stars A compelling Venetian romance This year Vittoria is in charge of the Seder, the Jewish feast in celebration of Passover. Laying out the table, baking the unleavened matzah, the preparation of the maror – bitter herbs – and the kid, along with traditional sweets, is all a joyful task, as well as a chance to take her mind off the man who for some time now has made her heart beat with excitement – for the first time after so many years of being happily married to Giacomo. Each of the guests brings to the magnificent dinner table his or her own past, hidden thoughts and desires. From the secret love story of old aunt Angelina, who courageously faced the war years and persecution, to the dilemmas pressing the families of the new millennium and its globalized precariousness – three generations comparing notes on the Hebrew roots they share and the meaning of existence over the course of an evening destined to change the lives of all those present. A richly depicted portrait of three generations of a contemporary Venetian family. Anna Vera Sullam (born in Venice) is a professor of Italian at University Ca’ Foscari in Venice. She is the author of I nomi dello sterminio, published by Einaudi. 31 commercial FICTION 456 pages May 2012 Patrizia Tamà La profezia di Michelangelo Michelangelo’s Prophecy Beatrice Maureeno’s latest investigation Vatican City, 1991. Art Restorer Gabriel De Leon is stunned to find a face just like his in a fresco he has just uncovered. It was a face among the hundreds that appear in the Last Judgement, painted several centuries before his birth. Gabriel is a renowned art restorer who has spent years working on the frescos of the Sistine Chapel, but after this disturbing discovery, his life will never be the same. Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, Francesco Borromini and Napoleon are just a few of the characters De Leon will discover among the faces in Michelangelo’s greatest work from the sixteenth century, and will lead others to question his sanity. 32 A few years later the researcher Beatrice Maureeno, famous for having tracked down Dante’s fourth cantica, receives a message from Gabriel De Leon, but as soon as she opens the envelope, she faints and is seized by a vision. When she wakes, the message is gone and De Leon is found dead in a psychiatric ward... Michelangelo’s Prophecy is a ruthless thriller that offers an original interpretation of Michelangelo’s masterpiece. Patrizia Tama, who was born in Modena, now lives and works in Milan. She is a freelance journalist and has published Italia ti ascolto (1991) and her first novel, La Quarta Cantica (2010). commercial FICTION 320 pages March 2012 Cinzia Tani Il bacio della dionea The Kiss of the dionea A terrible secret hidden under a passion for botany Padua, January 1, 1900. It’s a foggy morning when young Simone, who has sneaked out of the house to show his friend Betty his new slingshot, disappears. A few days later his lifeless body is found in a local park, buried beneath the snow. An itinerant painter is blamed for the crime, while the true killer, Giada, Betty’s older sister, is protected by their mother. Giada, full of energy and known for her bossiness, merely wanted the slingshot for herself and involuntarily strangled the boy. Oppressed by this terrible secret, Giada grows and becomes ever more overbearing. Yet, she is also fragile and certain that she will never deserve happiness. She has taken up her father’s love for botany and driven by her passion, one day she sets out for Mexico with her husband, an orchid hunter. Soon after their arrival, her husband dies and she meets up with the handsome revolutionary Lucas Rivera Mansi. Cinzia Tani (born in Rome in 1958) is a journalist,author of Assassine (1998), Coppie assassine (1999), Nero di Londra (2001), Amori crudeli (2003), and the best-selling novels L’insonne (2005), Sole e ombra (2007, Selezione Campiello Award) and Lo stupore del mondo (2009). 33 commercial FICTION 216 pages April 2012 Silvia Tesio Piacere, io sono Gauss I’m Gauss, Pleased to Meet You A light-hearted comedy on the value of truth and family bonds Gauss is ten years old and always tells the truth. It’s his trademark, an original take on the domineering attitude of his bizarre and deconstructed family, in which each member has a different last name and blood ties seem to melt like snow in the sun. Gauss is the only male in the house, an insolent daredevil who causes trouble that proves embarrassing even for the adults, as he hollers out the most unappealing truths in their faces, ever loyal to his vocation. Any excuse is good when it comes to tormenting his mother so that he might at long last learn who his father is – the man’s identity has always been kept secret from him. Matilde, his mom, has always 34 refused to discuss the matter, while Olimpia, the grandmother, is forced out of loyalty to her daughter to not reveal a thing. When the family moves to the small city of Casale Monferrato and teenage Leonora gets pregnant, the situation deteriorates. Silvia Tesio (born in Turin in 1970) works as a copywriter. She made her debut in 2009 with Te lo dico in un orecchio. Rights sold in Spain to Debolsillo/ RHM. NOVELIZED BIOGRAPHY 180 pages October 2012 Alfonso Signorini Amore, folle amore Love, crazy love Passion, luxury, torment. An extraordinary love story brought back into the spotlight They met at dance party: she, the most courted girl in Alabama and he, a young officer. Between them is born an all-consuming and tormented love from the very beginning. A love so legendary it makes the couple of Zelda and Francis Scott Fitzgerald an integral part of the “roaring Twenties” myth. They are beautiful, successful, and bound by a strong passion. But theirs is a story that always borders on insanity. Between Heaven and Hell. Furious arguments, jealousies, and malice alternate with moments of complete happiness, sweetness, and tenderness. It’s a passion that consumes them, destroys them, pushing Zelda to madness and Francis to alcoholism. Alfonso Signorini is the editor of the weekly magazine “Chi” , the leading Italian gossip magazine. With Mondadori, he has published the novelized biographies of the three great icons of our age: Troppo fiera, troppo fragile. Il romanzo della Callas (2007), Chanel. Una vita da favola (2009) and Marilyn. Vivere e morire d’amore (2010). Among his foreign publishers: Lumen, Record. Rocher, Psichogios, Weltbild Polska, Ripol, Dom Quixote, Narodna Knijga, Humanitas. Yet the two still search for each other, hate each other, and love each other for a lifetime, for like his Gatsby, Fitzgerald “believes in the green light” and the two continue to “beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.” In Love, Crazy Love, Alfonso Signorini transforms one of the most romantic and tumultuous love stories of all time into a captivating popular novel. 35 non FICTION 250 pages October 2012 Alberto Angela L’amore ai tempi dell’antica Roma Love in the Time of Ancient Rome Love and sex in the time of Augustus, from the author who made us all feel like ancient Romans Marriage and divorce, male and female prostitution, eunuchs and homosexuals, orgies and brothels, contraceptives and aphrodisiacs, polygamy and adultery, positions and sex toys... it all comes to life in Love in the time of ancient Rome. After spending 24 hours in the daily life of the ancient Romans in A day in the Life of Ancient Rome, after having followed a coin across the Empire in Empire, after more than half a million copies sold in Italy and a great number of foreign translations, Alberto Angela is back with a new book full of wonders, intrigues and surprises. Love in the Time of Ancient Rome immerses you in the best and worst of ancient love lives, told with great 36 simplicity, warmth, and accuracy. He breathes life into history’s intimate aspects, paying homage to that history made not by great figures but by individuals, those citizens whose daily habits contributed to the grandeur and power of the Roman Empire. Every detail is documented after rigorous study and research, but the fascination of the story is equal to that of the most successful novels. You’ll find that even ancient history can become a bestseller. Alberto Angela (born in Paris in 1962) hosts two of Italy’s most popular science TV programs. In 2007 he published with Mondadori Una giornata nell’antica Roma (300,000 copies sold) and in 2010 Impero (300,000 copies sold). Rights sold in Germany (Riemann/ RH), Spain (Esfera de los Libros), US+UK (Europa Editions), Russia (Atticus), Japan (Kawade-Shobo), PR China (Science Academy), Bulgaria (Colibri), Taiwan (Cité Publ.), Lituania (Tyto Alba), Finland (Art House). non FICTION 248 pages September 2012 Simonetta Cerrini L’apocalisse dei Templari The templars’ apocalypse Mission and destiny of the still mysterious religious Order of Knights Simonetta Cerrini, a mediaevalist famous worldwide for her studies on the Templars, uncovers the Knights Templars’ true view of the world, not only back in the days when the Order was established, but also during the years when it reached the height of success in the Holy Land and all over Europe – starting from the great symbolical fresco that can be found in the Templar Church of San Bevignate, in Perugia. “The Templars rose during a period of deep crisis – both personal and collective: after the conquest of the earthly Jerusalem, they felt lost, without a destination, deprived of the road towards the celestial Jerusalem. Their world was over. What gave them the strength to keep going was the belief that: They need us”. History, iconography, the contemporary intellectuals and theologians’ statements, as well as the books read and those translated for the Templars (like the French monk Adsone’s text on the Antichrist), the precious relics that they obtained (not least the Holy Shroud), all prove that the Templar’s cavalry arose under an apocalyptic perspective. We are drawing to a close of an era, too. The Templars might, perhaps, show us the way. Simonetta Cerrini, a mediaevalist, in 1998 gave a dissertation about the Knights Templars for her PhD thesis at the Sorbonne University, which included a critic edition of their “Rule”. She is the author of several articles on this matter, all quoted in the Templars’ official bibliography. With Mondadori she published La rivoluzione dei Templari (2008). 37 non FICTION 296 pages September 2012 Marco Santagata Dante The “novel” of Dante’s life This powerful book by Marco Santagata, the greatest Dante expert in Italy, makes up – in the Dante literature scenario – a precious and enjoyable novelty, for many reasons. First of all, it is the passionate story, the “novel”, of Dante’s tormented existence. But it is also the documented portrait of a man passionately involved in the public and cultural life of Florence, his town, and of the complex dynamics of Italy’s history between the years 1200 and 1300 (the Guelph-Ghibelline conflict, White and Black, the main actors in what became an irreconcilable conflict between Papacy and Empire, the “suns” of Dante’s philosophicalpolitical universe). 38 Thanks to the great intertwining of both historical and private events, the ability to transform even the most ephemeral traces into meaningful clues, and the masterful command of the sources, Santagata is able to reach the double aim of reassembling, as best as possible, Dante’s overall picture as a father, philosopher, poet, a courter and party man, and analyze each single work of his by taking into consideration the particular historical and biographical context in which the author conceived it and gave birth to it. Marco Santagata is a writer, literary critic, college professor. He is one of the leading Italianists and scholars of Dante and Petrarca. non FICTION 732 pages May 2012 Rosario Villari Un sogno di libertà Dream of Freedom The decline of the Neapolitan empire, 1585-1648 An important essay that penetrates the deepest crevices of 17th-century Neapolitan society and politics as the author reconstructs the history of southern Italy at that time, with respect to the Spanish monarchy’s worldwide empire. He breaks from a tenaciously long tradition when he demonstrates that Spanish dominion did not meet solely passive reactions, inertia, provincialism and primitive forms of rebellion in southern Italy. The “dream of freedom” – analyzed in these pages on the basis of a staggering amount of documentation – was a real movement that saw the involvement of populations and individuals, men and women, linked ideally, amid the tumult of the Thirty Years’ War, to the reformist currents in modern Europe’s major cities, including those in Spain itself. This winning tale, packed with exceptional events and personalities, culminates with the surprising and monumental revolution of 1647 in Naples. A key work on the history of southern Italy of the 1600s. rosario villari is one of the most highly regarded living Italian historians specialized in 17thcentury Naples. He is the author of a long list of historical essays and of the most widely used history books in Italy’s high schools today. 39 non FICTION 90 pages September 2012 Oscar Niemeyer Il mondo è ingiusto The World is not Fair The last lesson by a great sage of our epoch 104 years old and completely engaged, energetic and very charming : Oscar Niemeyer is, without a doubt, the most famous architect alive. But Niemeyer is also a contemporary humanist, an anticonformist thinker who has always reconciled his moral and civil engagement with his passion for beauty. This slim and yet powerful book contains his latest reflections. The World is not Fair is a collection of the thoughts of a great sage of our epoch, according to whom “nothing is important, people are important, not architecture.” He writes about old age, politics, society, art, and the encounters with the protagonists of two centuries, from Fidel Castro to Jean Paul 40 Sartre, from Le Corbusier to André Malraux, from Luis Carlos Prestes to Giorgio Mondadori, by whom he was charged with designing the Italian headquarters of the publishing house Mondadori. An important message for our troubled times with an interesting contribution by Alberto Riva. Oscar Niemeyer was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1907. He is considered one of the bestknown and most important representatives of modern international architecture. Alberto Riva (born in Milan in 1970) is an Italian journalist living in Brasil. With Mondadori he published the novel Sete (2011). non FICTION 180 pages November 2012 Louis Godart La Tavola Doria Battle of Anghiari Tavola Doria The story of the remarkable rediscovery of Leonardo da Vinci’s lost work Battle of Anghiari Tavola Doria, a masterpiece that many attribute to Leonardo da Vinci, others to a sixteenth century Tuscan painter, will be displayed for the first time ever in a special exhibition at the Quirinal in November 2012. This volume recounts the events that led to the painting’s recovery and discusses its interesting history. According to the author, the Tavola Doria is the rough draft of Da Vinci’s piece, the Battle of Anghiari, which was made sometime between 1504 and 1505 in the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence. The Tavola Doria is where Leonardo first experimented with the new type of plaster he used in his later works. The plaster on his draft was perfect, but Da Vinci mixed the plaster too far away from the heat source for his fresco, causing the piece to “drip.” As Giorgio Vasari described in his Lives of the Artistists, Leonardo abandoned the project soon thereafter. Louis Godart is an Italian archaeologist of Belgian descent. He teaches at the University Federico II at Naples and is the Director for the Conservation of Artistic Heritage of the President of the Italian Republic. He is the author of numerous essays and monographs. 41 non FICTION 264 pages February 2012 Folco Quilici Relitti e tesori Shipwrecks and treasures Adventures and mysteries in the seas of the world 2012 seems to be, almost as a curse of the sea, the year of shipwrecks. The centennial of the Titanic as well as the sinking of the Concordia off the island of Giglio in Italy – the biggest ship ever to be lost at sea – have caught the attention of public opinion regarding the giants built by man that lost their the battle with nature. The famous “marine explorer” Folco Quilici tells the riveting stories of the many shipwrecks that he has seen and photographed during his long career spanning the seas of the world. From the most ancient means of navigation on the Mediterranean to the ships sunk during the Second World War, from the submarines 42 to the planes that plunged into the abyss, from the “poisoned ships” to the sunken treasure like the Riace Bronzes, the depths of the sea teem with countless man-made objects that are now abandoned and have become part of a true marine archeology. And behind every shipwreck hides a mysterious and fascinating story. In his usual straightforward style and aided by beautiful images – the fruit of years of exploration – Quilici accompanies the reader on an underwater journey: a spectacular immersion into where nature’s power encounters human technology. Folco Quilici, traveler, writer, and filmmaker, is the best-known Italian narrator of the seas and the continents. Among his books published at Mondadori are the essays: Mari del Sud ( 1991) , Il mio Mediterraneo (1992), I miei mari (1991) and Terre d’avventura (2009), and the novels Cacciatori di navi (1986), Cielo verde (1987), Naufraghi (1988), Alta Profondità (1999), L’abisso di Hatutu (2001), Mare rosso (2002) , I serpenti di Melqart (2003), La Fenice del Bajkal ( 2005) and Libeccio (2008). non FICTION 159 pages November 2012 Piergiorgio Odifreddi Diamo spazio al tempo Let’s make space for time The third volume in Odifreddi’s personal history of geometry In this new book Piergiorgio Odifreddi, after having investigated ancient and modern geometry, engages the contemporary research in the field. We’ll see the emergence of Einstein’s theory of relativity, which would strongly challenge the concept of space. Schläfli, Poincaré, Perelman are the names of some of the revolutionaries – for indeed it was a revolution – who shaped the hypothesis of a space with more dimensions. The hyper-cubes, the Möbius strip, Klein’s bottle are some of the names given to the curious objects devised for visualizing some aspects of these new geometric theories. With his usual light and witty approach, Odifreddi succeeds Piergiorgio Odifreddi (born in 1950) studied mathematics in Italy, the US, and the USSR. He taught logic at the University of Turin and at Cornell University. He contributes to “la Repubblica”, “L’Espresso” and “Le Scienze.” With Mondadori, he has published Matematico e impertinente (2007), Il Club dei matematici solitari del prof. Odifreddi (2009), Hai vinto, Galileo! ( 2009), C’è spazio per tutti (2010) and I solidi ignoti ( 2011). in the difficult task of making them accessible to his audience that, thanks to his mediation, can understand one of the highest abstractions of human intellect and again transforms one of the worst school nightmares for pupils of every generation into an attractive journey, full of surprises and curiosities. 43 non FICTION 132 pages October 2012 Luciano De Crescenzo Fosse ‘a Madonna! madonna willing Stories, graces apparitions of Jesus ‘Mother Renowned Neapolitan author Luciano De Crescenzo uses his trademark humor and sense of irony to describe the many faces of the holiest of holy beings: the Madonna. The people of Naples have long revered the Madonna, but their relationship goes beyond simple faith as we know it. In madonna willing, De Crescenzo delves into his childhood memories to examine the many amusing ties between his people and the Madonna, producing a work that is somewhere between a hagiographic treatise and a memoir that it as enlightening as it is hilarious. In more than thirty books Luciano De Crescenzo has described the more unusual and human face of 44 the Greek philosophers and the Greek myths. In this book he strips Holy Mother her aura of sanctity to make her a little more like us. Luciano De Crescenzo (Naples, 1928) worked as an IBM engineer for over twenty years and debuted with his first book, Così parlò Bellavista, in 1977. Since then he has published over thirty books, which have been translated in 19 languages in which he managed very successfully to make philosophy accessible to all. non FICTION 250 pages October 2012 Maria Rita Parsi Doni Gifts Everyday miracles by common people “The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift”. Albert Einstein. Any of us owns special gifts that for some reason are kept hidden inside and have been mystified, confused and misunderstood. Only few people realize how to use the special gifts inside us and understand the hidden, untapped power that can help us in transforming pain, anger, frustration, disease and any kind of obstacles in an extraordinary capability to acquire wealth and well-being and achieving what many would regard as impossible. In this book Maria Rita Parsi reveals this life-changing knowledge and teaches you how to apply this knowledge in your everyday life. She introduces the reader to the concept of “special gifts” and focuses on how learning to recognize the hidden powers of our brain. She also analyses and illustrates the phenomenon through exemplary stories of people reporting miraculous stories of positive changes as a result. An enriching guide, intuitive and powerful, uplifting and full of hope, which can really help you in transforming your life. Maria Rita Parsi is a writer and a psychotherapist. She has weekly columns in a number of newspapers and magazines. Her most recent books, all published by Mondadori, are: L’amore violato (1996), L’amore dannoso (1999), Fragile come un maschio (2000), Single per sempre (2007) and Ingrati (2011). 45 humour book 168 pages February 2012 Marcello D’Orta ’A voce d’ ’e creature Children’s Voices How naples kids see camorra ’A voce d’e creature is a foundation that, inside the confiscated villa of a mafia boss, takes in dozens of children from the poorest areas of Naples and the surrounding area. Don Luigi Merola leads this courageous undertaking. He has received death threats because of his stand against the camorra – the local mobsters – and is now under police escort. More than two decades after the success of Io speriamo che me la cavo, a bestseller with one million copies sold, Marcello d’Orta has collected the school essays of kids (sincere, poetic, shocking) on the city of Naples and the camorra. The result is more thought -provoking than so many political 46 and sociological analyses, and a whole lot more fun. “It’s easy to get into the camorra, but hard to get out.” “Between Nazis and camorristi, I prefer camorristi: At least they’re homeboys from Naples.” “As soon as you get to my town, you know you’re in the wrong place.” marcello d’orta (born in Naples in 1953) was a teacher in one of the poorest sections of Naples, known as the “casbah of Naples”. He is the author of Io speriamo che me la cavo, an extraordinary bestsellers with 1.000.000 copies sold, widely translated abroad. Rights sold in Germany to Diogenes. NON FICTION 216 pages October 2012 Nicola Gratteri, Antonio Nicaso Dire e non dire To Say without Saying The ten commandments of the ‘ndrangheta in the words of its affiliates In a hearing of the super trial in Palermo, Tommaso Buscetta maintained that he was not quite sure of the existence of a Calabrese mafia. In the 70s and 80s the ‘ndrangheta was making the news only because of the kidnappings. Today it represents a truly global threat: it controls the vast majority of cocaine in Europe and earns one and a half times the GDP of Calabria, 21.8 million euros per inhabitant, 44 billion total. Nicola Gratteri and Antonio Nicaso tell the ten commandments of the ‘ndrangheta through the words, thoughts, and reflections of those who embraced it, defend it, but also those who betrayed it. Their sources come from wire taps, testimonies from the trials, and pizzini [notes from the bosses]. They record the men of the ‘ndrangheta talking about everything: family, rules, power, life and death, as well as their relationship with politics and the state, which seem to be incapable of functioning without the votes and the money provided by this organization, by now one of the most powerful syndicates of international crime. “We can no longer look the other way, nor think that the fight against the mafia is something that concerns only law enforcement and magistrates,” the future of honest people depends first and foremost on the civil duty of reporting crimes and on the social obligation of knowledge. nicola gratteri is one of the most active magistrates in the fight against the ‘ndrangheta. Together with Antonio nicaso, a historian of criminal organizations, he published, with Mondadori, Fratelli di sangue (2009) , La malapianta, (2010) La mafia fa schifo. (2011). Among his foreign publishers Debate in Spain, Lebowski in the Netherlands and Kalligram in Slovak Republic. 47 memoir 200 pages February 2012 Lina Wertmüller Tutto a posto e niente in ordine Everything’s in place and nothing’s in order The autobiography of the Lady of Italian cinema, passionate and funny like one of her films “During my birth, a fat fly was buzzing around the room. My father, Federico Wertmüller, in spite of being a laic spirit, far removed from parapsychology, thought a dead man’s soul had materialized in that insect and that it was his father-in-law, the cavalier Arcangelo Santamaria Maurizio, waiting to transmigrate into the Arcangelina, as soon as she would be placed in her cradle, with a finger in her mouth and ruffled tuft of hair on her head.” This is the beginning of the extraordinary autobiographical tale by Arcangelina Wertmüller, the most famous female Italian director. Restless and insistent, Lina 48 discovers at a young age her passion for theater and enrolls in the academy of Pietro Sharoff. In 1963 she made her directorial debut with the movie The Basilisks, which would be followed by her great successes of the 70s and 80s, born from the happy collaboration with actors like Giancarlo Giannini, Mariangela Melato and Monica Vitti: The Seduction of Mimì, Love and Anarchy and Seven Beauties which was nominated for three Oscars. She has also directed for television and the opera. She is loved by her actors (from Marcello Mastroianni to Valerio Valeri, Milena Vukotic, Ugo Tognazzi etc.) and by her audience. She likes to call herself “a very lucky woman.” Lina Wertmüller lives in Rome, but descends from a noble Swiss family (her complete name is Arcangela Felice Assunta Wertmüller von Elgg Spanol von Braueich). She was the first female director to be nominated for an Oscar (1977) and she has won the most prestigious international prizes for cinema. non FICTION 228 pages November 2012 Francesco Rosi - Giuseppe Tornatore Mi chiamano professore ma faccio il cinematografo They Call Me Professor but I’m a Film-Maker Conversation with the film-maker Giuseppe Tornatore Francesco Rosi is without doubt one of the greatest figures in twentiethcentury Italian cinema and culture. Born in Naples in the early 1920s, he worked in the theatre and radio during the war, before becoming, in the 1960s, one of the most important and widely admired of all Italian filmmakers. His work was marked by political commitment and a bold determination to denounce the more unpalatable sides of Italian life, as in his celebrated film Le mani sulla città. His career intertwined with those of many other major figures in Italian culture, from Raffaele La Capria to Gian Maria Volontè, and from Luchino Visconti to Sophia Loren. Giuseppe Tornatore, one of the leaders of the new generation of film directors, has had many conversations with ‘maestro’ Rosi, establishing a profound intellectual and human affinity with him. In this book he gathers the fruits of these conversations, telling Rosi’s story and at the same time taking the reader on a journey through the most important phases in the recent history of Italy and its cinema. Giuseppe Tornatore, born in Bagheria, is one of the most celebrated living Italian directors. His films include Nuovo Cinema Paradiso (Oscar for Best Foreign Film 1988) and Baaria. 49 non FICTION 204 pages October 2012 Aldo Cazzullo L’Italia s’è ridesta Italy wakes up A journey in an Italy that resists and rises again “Today Italy is a Nation in a bad mood. Scared. Suspended between a past that does not come back and a future that does not arrive.” All of this does not happen by chance, it’s our responsibility. “We are sitting on a treasure chest, and we refuse to open it. We look at the finger of our discontent, and we forget the moon of our future.” We are a precious Nation, admired, envied, with hidden virtues. We have to put them on display. We must find again the pride that led a Nation destroyed by bombs and divided by civil war to become one of the greatest economic powerhouses of the world in the span of a generation. The gaze of the journalist and the sensibility of the writer investigate 50 the familiar and respectable face, what is known and what should remain unknown of an Italy that is rarely seen on the front page of newspapers. Cazzullo’s pen draws a picture of a Nation that is radically different from the stereotypes, and that, plagued by the economic crisis, is redefining its own identity. “There is an Italy that resists and rises again. It’s only a matter of discovering it and telling its tale.” Aldo Cazzullo, a journalist and a writer, is a columnist for the “Corriere della Sera”. He is the author of numerous monographs, among which: I ragazzi di Via Po 1997), I grandi vecchi (2006), L’Italia de noantri (2009), Viva l’Italia! (2010, a bestseller with 100,000 copies). In 2011 he published his first novel La mia anima è ovunque tu sia. non FICTION 200 pages February 2012 Bruno Vespa Il palazzo e la piazza The Palace and the Crowd The new historical-political book from the most famous television journalist The latest thought-provoking essay by one of the greatest Italian reporters who, as ever, gives to his numerous readers an important contribution to better understand Italy and its delicate political and financial situation. Beginning with the momentous crisis of 1929 and the Great Depression, the book reconstructs the most difficult moments in the economic history of Italy and the world, concluding with the dramatic events of November 2011, with the unexpected resignation of premier Silvio Berlusconi, the surprising nomination of Mario Monti as Prime Minister, and the launching of the so-called “professors’ administration.” Through the words and testimonies of the protagonists, updated till the book’s publication, Vespa describes the backstage of a dramatic year, confused and yet decisive, for Italy’s destiny and explores crisis and consensus from Mussolini to the new force in Italian politics, the activist Beppe Grillo, a sort of Italian Michael Moore. Bruno Vespa was born in 1944 in L’Aquila. Since 1996 his TV program “Porta a porta” has been the mostwatched talk show on politics and current events. With Mondadori, he has published Telecamera con vista, Il cambio, Il duello, La svolta, La sfida, La corsa, Dieci anni che hanno sconvolto l’Italia, Scontro finale, La scossa, Rai, La grandeguerra, La Grande Muraglia, Il Cavaliere e il Professore, Storia d’Italia da Mussolini a Berlusconi, Vincitori e vinti, L’Italia spezzata, L’amore e il potere, Viaggio in un’Italia diversa, Donne di cuori, Il cuore e la spada e Questo amore. 51 non FICTION 264 pages March 2012 Federico Fubini Noi siamo la rivoluzione We Are the Revolution Globalization meets tradition: the spark for trasformation In the age of globalization, understanding the trends and the reasons for major upheavals may prove a difficult task. Yet the cultural, political and social geography of a large portion of the planet is rapidly transforming. Federico Fubini takes us on a journey with seven different destinations – Thailand, Bhutan, India, Saudi- Arabia, Ethiopia, Tunisia and Catanzaro/ Italy, from East to West – that become seven chapters, in each of which he recounts a 20th-century revolution, and he analyses their common elements. When the effects of economic development encounter traditional culture a political, social or cultural revolution is 52 born, as seen in the Arab Spring, in the women’s movement of Saudi Arabia, in the youth uprising in Tunisia. A revolution that’s infectious in every sense of the word, often hinged to the internet’s social networks. Federico Fubini (born in Florence in 1966) is on the staff of Corriere della Sera, where his main focus is international economics. non FICTION 80 pages November 2012 Federico Rampini Voi avete gli orologi, noi abbiamo il tempo You Have the Clocks, We Have the Time The “gray panthers”’ victory. Why middle-aged men are not a burden anymore, but a resource Thanks to them, Italy ranked seventh as the most industrialized country in the world. We owe them the economic miracle, the consumption boost and the great achievements when it comes to civil rights. Those once called baby boomers, are now on the fringes of society. There seems to be no more space for them: they are only kept into consideration – in public debates – when arguing about retirements. And yet, the so-called “gray panthers”, as defined by Rampini, could still be very useful to our society. The average life expectancy has reached ninety years old, the baby boomers have got ahead of them a “second adulthood”. Which must be spent working, giving them the chance to pass on a fund of experience that no hard disk could ever hold. The people of Afghanistan have a saying: “You have the clocks, we have the time”: a proverb against the Western craze/ hectic mentality. The middle-aged have made this idea their own: a few gray hair have taught them to reduce their pace and put this philosophy into practice Rampini’s book is a generation manifesto, to prove that memories and reminiscences are not the only important things, but that there is also a future to be written, indeed to be typed, perhaps on an iPad’s keyboard. Federico Rampini, after years in Beijing, is currently the New York correspondent for “la Repubblica” and has taught in the universities of Berkeley and Shanghai. This is his eight book published by Mondadori. His foreign publishers include Laffont, Presença and Dokoran. 53 religious Books 300 pages October 2012 Vittorio Messori Bernadette non ci ha ingannati Bernadette has not deceived us A historical investigation into the events at Lourdes The burden of the world’s greatest Marian sanctuary rests on the feeble shoulders of a poor, sickly, illiterate girl of fourteen. She was the only one to ever see ‘the beautiful lady’; the only witness to the eighteen apparitions inside a cave near Massabielle over a century ago. 150 years after that first apparition on February 11, 1858, the number of visitors to the site of Lourdes continues to rise, reaching up to 6 million people each year. Bernadette has not deceived us is unique among the author’s other bestselling titles, the result of a 30 - year - long study and maintains the characteristic balance between respect for people’s faith and providing honest 54 and diligent historical research. The book contains no hyperbole nor trivialization, but rather an impressive body of data carefully collected over thirthy years with the aim of answering one sole question: was Bernadette telling the truth? Were Bernadette’s visions real? Was Bernadette credible? Vittorio Messori (Sassuolo, 1914) is the author of numerous books which have been translated worldwide, such as: Ipotesi su Gesù (with over one million copies sold in Italy); Rapporto sulla fede, an interview with a former prefect of the Holy Office, the cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and - most important of all - the first conversation in history to be granted by Pope John Paul II, Varcare la soglia della Speranza (1994), one of the greatest bestsellers ever published worldwide. He is a journalist, who collaborates with “Corriere della Sera”. religious Books 300 pages September 2012 Camillo Ruini - Andrea Galli Intervista su Dio Interview About God The words of the faith, the path of reason How can we be sure that God exists? And if he does, how can we be certain that he cares about us? How far can reason take us, and why should we believe in the god of Jesus Christ? Belief in God’s existence can often come under attack amidst the secularization and religious criticism in our society, but in this book, Cardinal Ruini traces God’s footsteps through history, science and culture, presenting a variety of paths one can take to approach religious faith. Former President of the Italian Episcopal Conference and a journalist of the leading Catholic newspaper “Avvenire” engage in a dialogue on a topic crucial to today’s society. Interview about God aims to help believers identify the reasons for their faith while also providing support for those who would like to become believers. Cardinal Camillo Ruini served as President of the Italian Episcopal Conference and is currently the head of the Italian Church Cultural Affairs Commission as well as the International Commission for Medjugorje. He is also the author of numerous books. Andrea Galli is a journalist for the daily newspaper “L’Avvenire”. 55 religious Books 200 pages November 2012 Joseph Ratzinger Pensieri di fede per una vita felice Thoughts on Faith for Leading a Happy Life A poignant meditation on faith by the man now Pope Benedict XVI A collection of Pope Benedict XVI’s thoughts on faith and christian life taken not from official statements nor encyclicals, but rather from the Holy Father’s private discussions. The topics discussed are arranged in alphabetical order ranging from charity work, consumerism and the environment, to globalization and loneliness, with particular attention given to the subjects that are at the core of Benedict XVI’s teachings. By the same author Mondadori published in February Witnesses of the Christian Message, a book on masters of the Christian faith and witnesses to its modernity. Men ‘on a journey’: such are the figures that Benedict XVI presents 56 in this book , which comprises thirty vivid portraits which will ‘educate God’s people by introducing them to the work of writers who have provided exemplary illustrations of the living faith of the Church’: Ambrose, Cyprian, Ephraim Syrus, John Chrysostom, Jerome, William of Saint-Thierry, Irenaeus of Lyon, Tertullian and many others. Anyone who has heard their teachings cannot fail to appreciate their present-day relevance. Joseph Ratzinger (born in Germany in 1927) has been head of the Roman Catholic Church since April 2005 under the name Benedict XVI. A prolific author, theologian and university professor, Ratzinger served as an “expert” at the Second Vatican Council, and was tapped in 1977 by Pope Paul VI to lead the German Archdiocese of Muenich and Freising. In 1981, Pope John Paul II called him to Rome to head the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, where he served until his papal election. religious Books 200 pages September 2012 Carlo Maria Martini Colti da stupore Standing in awe Christ’s universal message, told by cardinal Martini In a recent article published before his death last september, Carlo Maria Martini states that “the Church’s first priority is not that of supporting the moral behavior of human beings. Above all, it must proclaim the Gospel, which says that God accepts all men, with no exceptions. It must proclaim the Gospel of mercy ignoring those who exploit it for their own benefit. It provides that extra something required to turn an honest man into a man who models himself after Christ’s poverty.” The Gospels, centered on the figure of Christ, are the theme and the inspiration for a series of sermons cardinal Martini has delivered Carlo Maria Martini, (recently passed away), a Jesuit, an internationally recognized Bible scholar, was the archbishop of Milan. At the end of his Episcopal service he retired to Jerusalem, where he resumed his studies. A respected exegetical and theological scholar, he has published more than 40 books, all widely translated abroad. over the last few years. This brief and enlightening book, organized according to the liturgical calendar, collects these speeches that constitute a narration of Christ’s life, offering a philosophical message rather than a theological one, focused on the most basic values and the “most human” behaviors. Carlo Maria Martini’s reflections on Christ’s story constitute a universal example, for believers and laic alike, a precious guide to learning how to lead “our life,” without giving into conformism. 57 religious Books 144 pages October 2012 Gianfranco Ravasi Guida ai naviganti Advice to the Seafarers The reasons for faith At the beginning of the “Year of the Faith”, Gianfranco Ravasi, with this very original contribution, sets the course for a symbolic navigation between the sacred and the profane, church and state. This journey, filled with reflections and impressions taken from philosophical thought, literature, and art – spanning from Kafka to Borges, from Augustine to Kierkegaard, from Ionesco to Cioran – but also from the world of scientific research, is an “itinerarium mentis in Deum” that starts from the City of man, “a metropolis without cathedrals” and explores the realm of the Spirit. These limpid and engaging pages traverse not only the biblical field, which Ravasi handles with his usual 58 unparalleled mastery, but also the field of laic culture, establishing an inspiring dialogue. This is a fast-paced essay of great depth, surprisingly new for its structure and tone, and for his intense personal participation. Gianfranco Ravasi (born near Milan in 1942), archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church, is currently the president of the Pontifical Council for culture as well as the Pontifical Committees for Ecclesiastical art and sacred Archeology. A biblical scholar and an Hebraist, he has written a long list of religious essays, widely translated abroad. Among his foreign publishers: Herder, Fleurus, Salwator, Verbo Divino, Dom Quixote, St. Andrew Biblical Theological Institute. memoir 216 pages September 2012 Salvatore Accardo Il miracolo della musica The miracle of music The surprising autobiography by the undisputed heir of Niccolò Paganini Salvatore Accardo is one of the most famous violinists in the world, in addition to being a conductor. A true musical talent (although he doesn’t consider himself as such), he picked up a violin for the first time in 1944, at three years of age. His father, a miniaturist from Torre del Greco, gave him a child-size one as a present and instinctually he played Lili Marleen. In 1952, at age eleven, he is accepted to the San Pietro a Majella conservatory in Naples, where he graduates by playing all twenty-four of Paganini’s Capricci. Thus began his fulminating career, which would take him around the world and give him the opportunity to meet with the greatest musicians of each country. His repertoire is truly vast, although Paganini has marked – and, in a certain way, even conditioned – his entire professional life. Accardo tells his own story for the first time in these pages, revealing previously unknown facts, like that when he was young he was a very promising soccer goalkeeper and that he played unbeknownst to his father, who wanted him to be a violinist. He uncovers secret passions, such as one for the movies of another exceptional Neapolitan, Totò, as well as less secret ones, such as his love for Ines and Irene, his two twin daughters, age three and a half. Salvatore Accardo, born in Turin only by chance from a Neapolitan family, grew up in Naples. He has won the most prestigious prizes and competitions on both the national and international level. He has worked with the major orchestras of the world and in 1992 he founded the “Accardo quartet” and in 1996 the “Orchestra da camera italiana”. 59 non FICTION 195 pages September 2012 Irene Bernardini Bambini e basta Children are Just Children Because we must not forget we are the adults Looking around, we can see that our society is filled with childish adults and adult children; there are adults that reject their roles and children who must take up the reigns. It seems as though children are losing their right to a childhood; there are dancers, soccer players, actors, painters, singers, models— but where are the children who are just children? The innocent daydreamers who ask for our love and attention, who rely on us to protect them from the stresses in life—where have they gone? Irene Bernardini explains how badly we need to reestablish the roles of parents and children through stories of everyday families. Our children need strong parents as 60 much as they need to be allowed a proper childhood full of play and imagination. This is a book for all those girls and boys who need us to behave as adults and all us men and women who need our children to be just children. Irene Bernardini is a clinical psychologist. She has been the coordinator of the GeA Center (Still Parents Center) in Milan since 1989. She has also written a column for “Vanity Fair” since 2004 and has published Finché vita non ci separi (1995), Una famiglia come un’altra (1997) and Elogio di una donna normale (2010). non FICTION 159 pages February 2012 Lella Ravasi Bellocchio L’amore è un’ombra Love is a Shadow The hidden side of maternity Mums are not always good. Mums are not always right. How many mothers are filled with envy of the beauty and youth of their daughters? How many of them see their children only as a reflection of their narcissistic ego? How many mothers, closed in their sufferance, are unable to take care of their children properly? Every mother has a shadow inside her: Lella Ravasi Bellocchio explores the hidden side of maternity in a very direct way in this harsh and thought-provoking essay, telling significant stories of “terrible” mothers. Not only the extreme cases (such as Dolores, who kills her daughter as she is convinced the newborn is ugly), but also stories of daily life, of domineering mothers, or of mothers unable to love their children because totally selfconcentrated, depressed or aggressive. This is a book that can help to find the correct way to approach your child: never hyper-protective, or aggressive or all-absorbing. Lella Ravasi Bellocchio is a Jungian psychoanalyst and a member of the International Association for Analytical Psychology. She is the author of many essays on the feminine world. 61 non FICTION 180 pages April 2012 Francesca Caferri Il Paradiso ai piedi delle donne Paradise under the feet of women Women and the future of the Islamic world This book tells the story of several women in six different Islamic nations (Morocco, Egypt, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia) that the author has been visiting as a journalist for the past decade: she has tracked down their work and progress over the years. Some of them, like Tawakkol Karman, head of Women Journalists Without Chains and the first Arab woman winner of the Nobel Peace Prize 2011, were less well known outside their communities when we started our conversations and became acquainted. By profiling ordinary women, as well as human rights activists, politicians, journalists and bloggers, this book aims to underline the role of 62 women in the development of the Muslim world and seeks to dispel some of the stereotypical views about women in Islamic societies. It portrays a situation that is very different country by country and reveals many contradictions in a mostly Western media narrative which tends to profile the condition of Muslim women as … all the same. The body of it has tended to focus on issues of human rights, inter cultural dialogue and the role of civil society in advancing human dignity. Francesca Caferri is an awardwinning foreign correspondent of the daily “la Repubblica”. She has reported in recent years from Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Lebanon, Pakistan, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. non FICTION 125 pages September 2012 Luisella Costamagna Noi che costruiamo gli uomini We Who Make Men Stories of women who believe in themselves In June 2011, a Nielson survey that was conducted across 21 countries revealed that despite the great feminist movements of the sixties and seventies, Italian women continue to identify themselves as homemakers rather than as workers and businesswomen. They are convinced there are no opportunities for them outside the home, when in fact, they simply lack self-esteem. Can this mentality, that negatively influences their opportunities and makes women vulnerable to abuse, be corrected? Luisella Costamagna is convinced that it can and has collected the stories of ten women who have succeeded in life despite the many challenges —including the nagging voice saying “I-won’t-make-it”. Noi che costruiamo gli uomini is a call to women to take on their dreams; a voice of encouragement in a storm of doubt telling women to become their own masters and do the things they never thought they could accomplish. Luisella Costamagna is a journalist, writer and anchorwoman who has worked on some of the most influential political programming in Europe. She has received numerous awards and writes the columns in “Diva” e “Donna” and “Il Salvagente”. 63 memoir 216 pages October 2012 Ramin Bahrami Come Bach mi ha salvato la vita How bach saved my life The extraordinary story of one of the greatest pianists of our times Born in Teheran, Iran in 1976, Ramin Bahrami has interpreted Bach’s music with an originality and sensibility that excited even the harshest critics, who have compared him to the legendary Glenn Gould. Ramin was only seven years old when his father Parviz, a passionate violinist and a Scià engineer for many years, was incarcerated by the Khomenist regime on suspicion of working for the West. “Befriend Bach, he’ll never abandon you” his father told him before leaving. He would die in an Ayatollah prison five years later in 1991. He was a beloved figure, who instilled a love for music and an unceasing desire to change the world in his young and talented son. Forced to emigrate to Europe 64 at eleven following the aftermath of the Iranian revolution, Ramin takes refuge in Italy and graduates at the top of his class in piano from the Verdi Conservatory in Milan. This is when he began his interpretative research of Bach’s production, which would earn him world fame and which Ramin Bahrami approaches with the respect and cosmopolitan sensibility acquired through his training. Bach’s music, he writes in this book, and its universal message of freedom, harmony, and beauty “resemble the world we still imagine to be possible.” Ramin Bahrami (Teheran, 1976), Iranian pianist, is considered one of the greatest interpreters of Bach of our time. memoir 192 pages January 2012, Massimiliano Verga Zigulì A disquieting memoir by the father of a disabled child Massimiliano Verga is the father of 7-year-old Moreno, who was born healthy but within days developed conditions that led to severe disabilities. “Here I have gathered together the odors, the tastes, the images of seven years of living with my son Moreno, our second of three. Odors – mostly unpleasant. Tastes – that made me puke. Images – that my eyes would never wish to have seen. I’ve even thought that it is he that wields the hand of fortune – because he cannot see, because his brain is the size of a marble. But to tastes you get accustomed. You don’t even notice the odors any more. Because as I always say, from zero to ten, my anger level continues to be eleven. This book is one of many pictures I’ve taken in recent years. I feel like a photographer who still uses a camera with film. To see the results of a shot, I have to wait for someone to develop the film and print it for me.” An intense, touching and gripping account. Massimiliano Verga is 42 years old. He teaches sociology of law at the Milano-Bicocca University. This is his first book, with 30.000 copies already sold. 65 cook books 240 pages September 2012 Sonia Peronaci divertiti cucinando Fun with Cooking A new adventure with the creator of the website Giallo Zafferano Sonia Peronaci is the creator of GialloZafferano.it, Italy’s most beloved cooking website, where she features recipes that are fast, flavorful and original. The kitchen has always been at the center of Sonia’s life and in her book, Fun with cooking, she bans boredom from the kitchen by taking everyday meals and making them extraordinary. It doesn’t take much to create a culinary masterpiece at home and in her much-awaited second book, Sonia teaches you to cook meals that are healthy, delicious, and above all, fun to make. Whether you’re looking to make a simple dinner or fix an elegant feast for friends—or even just 66 reuse leftovers without your kids knowing—the 100 new recipes in Fun with cooking will have just what you need. Try it, and if you want to know more about it just click on www. giallozafferano.it Sonia Peronaci is the most beloved online chef since, a few years ago, she started delighting her fans by creating the website www. giallozafferano.com. This is her second book : in 2011 she published with Mondadori Le mie migliori ricette. cook books 204 pages November 2012 Antonella Clerici con Alessandra Spisni and Sergio Barzetti La prova del cuoco The Chef’s Proof The new cookbook from the golden team of Italian gastronomy If somebody has taught cooking to Italians over the last few years, without a doubt that somebody is Antonella Clerici. On one hand through her daily TV program “La prova del cuoco”, she suggests recipes and tricks to million of housewives. On the other hand with her successful books she brought her philosophy of simple cooking into Italian homes. Tradition, modernity and simplicity: these are the three main ingredients in her latest new book where the popular Antonella shares her love for cooking Italianstyle with two exceptional chefs: Alessandra Spisni, a chef from Bologna, and Sergio Barzetti, an expert of mise-en-place . Both of them are by her side in her popular TV program and are the biggest inspiration for a great variety of tasteful dishes between tradition and modernity. Don’t miss a single bite! Antonella Clerici is a professional journalist and a TV host, successfully leading the cheerful company of “La prova del cuoco”. She is the author of the highly successful three volumes Oggi cucini tu, Le ricette d’oro della “Prova del cuoco” and Scuola di cucina. Alessandra Spisni is the founder of the cooking school “La vecchia scuola bolognese”, being the best chef of the Bologna tradition. She is the author of the 2011 bestseller La maestra di cucina. Sergio Barzetti after years of training in hotels and restaurants, is now chef and is a contributor to the magazine “La cucina Italiana” 67 non FICTION 200 pages November 2012 Luciana Litizzetto New Book The new poisonous and mercilessly funny book by the Italian “queen of comedy” “I always talk about love in the nether regions. I can’t fly any higher… I fly low like turkeys. It’s the both the good and the bad thing about me.” There must be a reason why Luciana Littizzetto is the most read comedian in Italy. Maybe because no one else is capable of pointing out our great faults and little shortcomings, for, in her monologues, both the king and his subjects are equally naked. “Men undressing in front of women has always been one of nature’s great spectacles, it’s like seeing a cat fall off the toilet seat. It’s funny and endearing at the same time. The shirt part is not too bad. Although it looks like their swimming in polenta, they still manage to emerge 68 from it without too much infamy. And without praise, either. When they get to the nether regions, that’s when they’re really in trouble. There’s some who, as soon as they see a taste of slurpee coming their way, they drop their pants and drawers down to their ankles. Bam. They unpeel themselves like bananas. It’s too bad that a cocktail of underwear jeans shoes and socks now lies at their feet, fused together, something they’ll never be able to escape. A sort of pedestal. They start hopping like they’re in a potato sack race. Like Subbuteo figurines. They goes from super hot to super dumb in a nanosecond.” Luciana Litizzetto (Turin, 1964), ex-professor of music education and literature, is a cult figure of Italian comedy. She has worked, with a great deal of success, in radio, film, and television. With Mondadori, she has published the humour books : Sola come un gambo di sedano, La principessa sul pisello, Col cavolo, Rivergination, La jolanda furiosa, I dolori del giovane Walter , massive bestsellers in Italy. Among her foreign publishers: Bertrand Brasil, Presença, Ripol, Eichborn, Alma Littera. Foreign Rights Manager Emanuela Canali ARNOLDO MONDADORI EDITORE via Mondadori,1 20090 Segrate-Milano canali@mondadori.it tel. +39.02.7542.3167 fax +39.02.7542.3047 Foreign Rights Assistant Nadia Colombo ARNOLDO MONDADORI EDITORE via Mondadori,1 20090 Segrate-Milano canali@mondadori.it tel. +39.02.7542.2384 fax +39.02.7542.3047 www.librimondadori.it