Sneha Girap (Editor)

Dino Buzzati

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Nationality
  
Italian

Role
  
Novelist

Name
  
Dino Buzzati

Notable works
  
The Tartar Steppe

Genre
  
Novel, short story


Dino Buzzati Photos de Dino Buzzati Babeliocom


Born
  
14 October 1906 San Pellegrino, Italy (
1906-10-14
)

Occupation
  
Graphic artist, novelist, short story writer, journalist

Died
  
January 28, 1972, Milan, Italy

Spouse
  
Almerina Antoniazzi (m. 1966–1972)

Movies
  
The Secret of the Old Woods, Barnabo of the Mountains, The Seventh Floor, Un a

Siblings
  
Adriano Buzzati-Traverso, Augusto Buzzati, Angelina Buzzati

Books
  
The Tartar Steppe, The Bears' Famous Invasion, Poem Strip, Il segreto del Bosco Vecchio, Boutique Del Mistero

Similar People
  
Valerio Zurlini, Adriano Buzzati‑Traverso, Italo Calvino, Albert Camus, Ray Bradbury

Le veston ensorcel dino buzzati


Dino Buzzati-Traverso ([ˈdino butˈtsati]; 14 October 1906 – 28 January 1972) was an Italian novelist, short story writer, painter and poet, as well as a journalist for Corriere della Sera. His worldwide fame is mostly due to his novel The Tartar Steppe, but he is also known for his well received collections of short stories.

Contents

Dino Buzzati Dino buzzati Muninn

Dino buzzati il colombre


Life

Dino Buzzati httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen118Din

Buzzati was born at San Pellegrino, Belluno, in his family's ancestral villa. Buzzati's mother, a veterinarian by profession, was Venetian and his father, a professor of international law, was from an old Bellunese family. Buzzati was the second of his parents' four children. One of his brothers was the well-known Italian geneticist Adriano Buzzati-Traverso. In 1924, he enrolled in the law faculty of the University of Milan, where his father once taught. As he was completing his studies in law, he was hired, at the age of 22, by the Milanese newspaper Corriere della Sera, where he would remain until his death. He began in the corrections department, and later worked as a reporter, special correspondent, essayist, editor and art critic. It is often said that his journalistic background informs his writing, lending even the most fantastic tales an aura of realism.

Dino Buzzati Dino Buzzati narratore di solitudini

Buzzati himself comments on the connection (as cited by Lawrence Venuti):

Dino Buzzati Dino Buzzati writelephant

It seems to me, fantasy should be as close as possible to journalism. The right word is not "banalizing", although in fact a little of this is involved. Rather, I mean that the effectiveness of a fantastic story will depend on its being told in the most simple and practical terms.

Dino Buzzati BUZZATI DINO1FALLING GIRL ALTRO

During World War II, Buzzati served in Africa, as a journalist attached to the Regia Marina. After the end of the war, Il deserto dei Tartari was published Italy-wide and quickly brought critical recognition and fame to the author. He married Almerina Antoniazzi in 1966, which also marked release of his last novel, Un amore. In 1972, Buzzati died of cancer after a protracted illness.

Works summary

Dino Buzzati Dino Buzzati writelephant

Buzzati began writing fiction in 1933. His works of fiction include five novels, theatre and radio plays, librettos, numerous books of short stories and poetry. His librettos include four for operas by Luciano Chailly, as well as that of the opera La giacca dannata by Giulio Viozzi.

He wrote a children's book La famosa invasione degli orsi in Sicilia (translated by Frances Lobb into English as The Bears' Famous Invasion of Sicily). Lemony Snicket wrote an introduction and reader's companion to a 2005 English edition.

Also an acclaimed and exhibited artist, Buzzati also combined his artistic and writerly exploits into making a comic book based on the myth of Orpheus, Poem Strip.

The Tartar Steppe, his most famous novel, tells the story of a military outpost that awaits a Tartar invasion. In its sentiment and its conclusions, it has been compared to existentialist works, notably Albert Camus's The Myth of Sisyphus.

His writing is sometimes cited as magical realism, social alienation, and the fate of the environment and of fantasy in the face of unbridled technological progress are recurring themes. He has also written a variety of short stories featuring fantastic animals such as the bogeyman and, his own invention, the colomber (il colombre). His Sessanta racconti short-story collection, which won the Strega Prize in 1958, features elements of science fiction, fantasy and horror throughout.

His works are highly regarded in France but little known in English.

References

Dino Buzzati Wikipedia