An Italian Journey
by Jean Giono
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In An Italian Journey, Jean Giono describes his journey to the land of his father's people. A reluctant traveler (he rarely left Provence), Giono discovers a strange beauty not only in the palazzi and canals of Venice but also in wistful waiters, suspicious hairdressers, pugnacious men of God, recalcitrant coffeemakers, umbrellas, and field machinery. In Giono's world a stamp collectors' market can appear to verge on revolution and inept municipal musicians suddenly offer Mozartian joys.Tags
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Member Reviews
The French author Jean Giono is known for his writings which are all set in his native area, the Provence region in France. Giono spent most of his life in Manosque, about which he also wrote a short novella. Giono travelled very little, and this book of Italian travels, Voyage en Italie, is exceptional.
Somewhere in the book, Giono says that his main objective while travelling is to be happy, and that happiness would be achieved best by drinking a cup of coffee in a street-side cafe. I can fully agree with that view, but that does not seem the best starting point for a volume of travel writings. This volume of travel writings about various Italian cities, notably Venice, Florence and Rome, tells us more about Giono than about the cities show more he visits. Information about the cities and interesting sights which can be visited there seems to be added as an afterthought, and very researched. As a travel guide, the book is quite useless, and it did not inspire me as a travel diary.
I traveled through Italy myself in the summer of 2010, visiting virtually the same cities as described by Giono. The book is structured in chapters, bearing the names of the respective Italian cities, and I had hoped to share some thoughts and ideas reading Giono's book. However, in that sense the book was a disappointment. show less
Somewhere in the book, Giono says that his main objective while travelling is to be happy, and that happiness would be achieved best by drinking a cup of coffee in a street-side cafe. I can fully agree with that view, but that does not seem the best starting point for a volume of travel writings. This volume of travel writings about various Italian cities, notably Venice, Florence and Rome, tells us more about Giono than about the cities show more he visits. Information about the cities and interesting sights which can be visited there seems to be added as an afterthought, and very researched. As a travel guide, the book is quite useless, and it did not inspire me as a travel diary.
I traveled through Italy myself in the summer of 2010, visiting virtually the same cities as described by Giono. The book is structured in chapters, bearing the names of the respective Italian cities, and I had hoped to share some thoughts and ideas reading Giono's book. However, in that sense the book was a disappointment. show less
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203+ Works 6,985 Members
Jean Giono was born in France on March 30, 1985. He was an author about whom Germaine Bree and M. Guiton have written, "When Giono's first novel, Colline (Hill of Destiny) appeared in 1929, it struck a fresh, new note. . . . After Proust and Gide, Duhamel and Romains, Cocteau and Giraudoux, what could be more restful than a world of wind and sun show more and simple men who apparently had never heard of psychological analysis, never confronted any social problems, never read any books. . ." (An Age of Fiction). Raised by his shoemaker father in a small town in the south of France, Giono's fiction has its roots in the peasant life of Provence. Horrified by his experiences in World War I, Giono returned to the world of his youth, which became the world of his imagination. After the shock of World War II, his novels seemed to gain in stature. One of his best is Horseman on the Roof (1951), his chronicle of the great cholera epidemic of 1838. Giono was honoured with the Prince Rainier of Monaco literary prize in 1953, awarded for his lifetime achievements, was elected to the Académie Goncourt in 1954, and became a member of the Conseil Littéraire of Monaco in 1963. Giono died of a heart attack in 1970. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- An Italian Journey
- Original title
- Voyage en Italie
- Original publication date
- 1953
Classifications
- Genres
- Travel, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir
- DDC/MDS
- 914.504 — History & geography Geography & travel Geography of and travel in Europe Italy, San Marino, Vatican City, Malta subdivisions and modified standard subdivisions Travel; guidebooks
- LCC
- PQ2613 .I57 .Z475513 — Language and Literature French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literatures French literature Modern literature 1900-1960
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 75
- Popularity
- 421,810
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.43)
- Languages
- English, French, German, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 3



























































