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16+ Works 1,077 Members 17 Reviews

About the Author

Also includes: Luigi Barzini (1)

Works by Luigi Giorgio Barzini

The Europeans (1983) 235 copies, 3 reviews
Memories of Mistresses (1987) 21 copies
Lär känna europén (1983) 14 copies, 1 review
Julius Caesar (1966) 2 copies
Nell'Estremo Oriente (2018) 2 copies
Nuova York 1 copy

Associated Works

Travelers' Tales ITALY : True Stories (1998) — Contributor — 119 copies
Peking to Paris: A Journey Across Two Continents (1907) — Introduction, some editions — 87 copies, 4 reviews
Avventure in Oriente — Editor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1908-12-21
Date of death
1984-03-30
Gender
male
Education
Columbia University
Occupations
journalist
Organizations
Corriere della Sera
Italian Liberal Party
Relationships
Barzini, Sr., Luigi (father)
Barzini, Benedetta (daughter)
Nationality
Italy
Birthplace
Milan, Italy
Places of residence
Milan, Italy
Rome, Italy
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
Rome, Italy
Associated Place (for map)
Italy

Members

Reviews

17 reviews
A wonderful (and very Italian) book about Italy. Published in 1964 and a product of its time in that it was written in the shadow of the Second World War, and its author views that cataclysm through an Italian lens, as yet another Italian defeat and collapse for which (invariably) Italians themselves were responsible. An additional tragedy of that war, for Italy, was that its plight in WW2 was only part of a wider European inferno for which many countries were responsible. Particularly good show more on many things but especially the nature of the Baroque and its enduring influence in Italy and Europe generally. Also the fact that Europe has been obsessed with Italy for as long as Europe has existed. show less
½
A bit dated (1964) but an insightful and still relevant portrait of Italy and Italians, and still a valuable resource. Read as part of my deep dive into my Italian family roots
A lively account, mostly about European Italians. At the time there was a good deal of Mafiosi news floating about, and I was curious about what had been formed on the Peninsula in the wake of the Middle ages and Renaissance. It moved well.
Given its age one might expect this book to be dated; however, I believe it to the single best book for gaining insight into Italian temperment and culture. It is humorous and informative. Read it on your next flight to Italy, and when you land you will instantly be connecting what you see and hear with what you have read.

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Statistics

Works
16
Also by
3
Members
1,077
Popularity
#23,870
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
17
ISBNs
35
Languages
4

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