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"Book 4, in which Don Camillo steals a march on Peppone over a matter of conscience and finds himself the life and soul of the Party."Tags
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Don Camillo, a village priest, manages to get Peppone, the mayor of the village and Senator who represents the Communist Party, to take him on a tour of the Soviet Union in a select group of ten of the best of the Communist party men of Italy. What follows is a funny yet poignant adventure of their complicated friendship and Don Camillo's calling. Even while poking Peponne and aggravating him to extremes, Don Camillo never forgets his true calling and is faithful.
Written in installments in 1959 for the paper Candido, this story was meant to be a nail in the coffin of Communism in Italy. It certainly laid its blows effectively, but what lives on are the characters and their very human interactions with each other and with God. This is a show more book I will read again, not for its political ideology, nor for its Theology, but for its warmth and humor and fine story-telling. show less
Written in installments in 1959 for the paper Candido, this story was meant to be a nail in the coffin of Communism in Italy. It certainly laid its blows effectively, but what lives on are the characters and their very human interactions with each other and with God. This is a show more book I will read again, not for its political ideology, nor for its Theology, but for its warmth and humor and fine story-telling. show less
Though I am neither Catholic nor Italian, I feel a closeness to this book -- this novel especially, but all the collected stories in the series -- and wish I could impart to everyone just how wonderful this novel and its message are.
Actually this book is also collected stories but together they create a narrative of one story, different from the other books by Guareschi.
At one time, he was THE largest-selling author in Italian, surpassing even Dante. Maybe he still is, but I fear that his positive sense of life, not to mention his Catholicism, and especially his anti-communism, will have relegated him to that proverbial trash heap.
Instead, the popular authors of today wallow in cynicism and violence, which is why they're popular, and show more why they are promoted by the pop media.
And a Guareschi is diminished.
Let me repeat: His stories are wonderful. His characters are wonderful. His settings are wonderful.
Oh, there are some dramatic moments of heart-breaking sorrow, especially his story of the wheat, but Guareschi and his characters know that life is not about sorrow and tragedy, even if both are parts of life.
Guareschi apparently believed in Catholic teachings of life and after-life that I don't, but I will forever be grateful his books are available, sometimes even online.
I just wish I could find his cartoons, especially the one of the character with three nostrils, which drawing got him threatened by the Antifa of his day. Some, maybe most, of his stories are illustrated with one of his drawings, but that paucity just makes me all the more want to see the rest.
I cannot stress too much the extent to which I love and recommend all the works of Guareschi, but "Comrade Don Camillo" is, I think, his best. show less
Actually this book is also collected stories but together they create a narrative of one story, different from the other books by Guareschi.
At one time, he was THE largest-selling author in Italian, surpassing even Dante. Maybe he still is, but I fear that his positive sense of life, not to mention his Catholicism, and especially his anti-communism, will have relegated him to that proverbial trash heap.
Instead, the popular authors of today wallow in cynicism and violence, which is why they're popular, and show more why they are promoted by the pop media.
And a Guareschi is diminished.
Let me repeat: His stories are wonderful. His characters are wonderful. His settings are wonderful.
Oh, there are some dramatic moments of heart-breaking sorrow, especially his story of the wheat, but Guareschi and his characters know that life is not about sorrow and tragedy, even if both are parts of life.
Guareschi apparently believed in Catholic teachings of life and after-life that I don't, but I will forever be grateful his books are available, sometimes even online.
I just wish I could find his cartoons, especially the one of the character with three nostrils, which drawing got him threatened by the Antifa of his day. Some, maybe most, of his stories are illustrated with one of his drawings, but that paucity just makes me all the more want to see the rest.
I cannot stress too much the extent to which I love and recommend all the works of Guareschi, but "Comrade Don Camillo" is, I think, his best. show less
I read this when I was in high school as it was a selection from the Book-of-the-Month Club . It was an entertaining and humorous account of a visit to the then Soviet Union by a group of Italians. Don Camillo surreptitiously gains access to the group and proceeds, disguised as a loyal Communist party member. As you might expect, the expedition provides one comic moment after the other.
When Don Camillo (the priest) blackmails Peppone (the Communist mayor and senator) into taking him on a trip to Russia, he finds ways to turn everyone's life upside down. Written in the mid-60's, it is wonderfully insightful about the political situation and about life and religion in general. Unlike the earlier Don Camillo books, this is a novel rather than a series of short sketches. ( )
Vedi recensione di [b:Don Camillo Mondo Piccolo|2613981|Don Camillo Mondo Piccolo|Giovannino Guareschi|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1206839845s/2613981.jpg|64845], con l'avvertenza che questo romanzo è un po' meno autentico, si svolge in gran parte in Unione Sovietica e c'è dentro un po' più di tensione politica, essendo l'autore cattolico e non certo comunista. Ma Don Camillo travestito da quadro del PCI in visita nel Kolchoz con Peppone non si batte. Credetemi.
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Books featuring monks and/or nuns
166 works; 33 members
Italian Literature
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- Canonical title
- Comrade Don Camillo
- Original title
- Il Compagno Don Camillo; Il compagno Don Camillo
- Original publication date
- 1963
- People/Characters
- Don Camillo; Peppone
- Important places
- Russia
- First words
- The news exploded like a bomb around Monday noon, upon the arrival of the newspapers.
1. Gold fever. - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It was a cold winter day and the mist rising from the river clouded over the end of this newly finished story, which already was older than time.
- Original language
- Italian
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- Genres
- General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 853.914 — Literature & rhetoric Italian, Romanian & related literatures Italian fiction 1900- 20th Century 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ3 .G9262 .C — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction in English
- BISAC
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- Reviews
- 9
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- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
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