Italo calvino cause of death

Italo Calvino

Cuban-born Italian writer and journalist (1923–1985)

"Calvino" redirects here. For other uses, see Calvino (disambiguation).

Italo Calvino (,[1][2];[3]Italian:[ˈiːtalokalˈviːno];[4] 15 October 1923 – 19 September 1985) was a Cuban-born Italian writer and journalist. His best-known works include the Our Ancestors trilogy (1952–1959), the Cosmicomics collection of short stories (1965), and the novels Invisible Cities (1972) and If on a winter's night a traveler (1979).

Admired in Britain, Australia and the United States, Calvino was the most translated contemporary Italian writer at the time of his death.[5] He is buried in the garden cemetery of Castiglione della Pescaia in Tuscany.

Biography

Parents

Italo Calvino was born in Santiago de las Vegas, a suburb of Havana, Cuba, in 1923. His father, Mario [it], was a tropical agronomist and botanist who also taught agriculture and floriculture.[6] Born 47 years earlier in Sanremo, Italy, Mario Calvino

Writer and a Partisan

Its History

He was born in Santiago de las Vegas, near Havana, on 15 October 1923 from the Sanremo agronomist Mario and the scientist Giuliana Eva Mameli from Sassari.

« I am Ligurian, my mother is Sardinian: I have the laconicity of many Ligurians and the mutism of Sardinians, I am the crossroads of two silent races », the writer would have confessed ("L'occhio e il silenzio" [interview, 1983]; then in "Sono nato in America...", 2012, p. 553), which had no memories of Cuba: his parents already returned to San Remo in the autumn of 1925 and settled in Villa Meridiana, a building in a dominant position over the city, introducing exotic plants such as avocado, papaya, guayaba, pink grapefruit, and managing the ancestral countryside of San Giovanni.

His father had been appointed director of the experimental floriculture station 'Orazio Raimondo' and, following the bankruptcy of Banca Garibaldi, made the park of his villa available for the continuation of his institute's research and teaching activities.
They were responsible for the transforma

Biography

Italo Calvino was born in 1923 in Santiago de las Vegas in Cuba. His parents were working there as botanists but the family returned permanently to Italy when Calvino was two years old, living on a farm in San Remo, where his parents continued their botanical work. He studied agriculture at the University of Turin but had to break off his studies when the Germans occupied Italy. He joined a partisan brigade but resumed his studies after the war, switching to literature and writing a thesis on Joseph Conrad. After university, he worked in publishing and journalism. He had also become a communist but left the party after the Soviet invasion of Hungary. He had started writing fiction at the end of the war, producing many stories which were only published later. His first novel – Il sentiero dei nidi di ragno (The Path to the Nest of Spiders) – was heavily influenced by the then fashionable neorealism movement and his communist views. However, he was already moving away from the standard communist approach to literature, i.e. a literature at the service of the p

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