Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Woman of Rome

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Originally published
  
1947

Genre
  
Fiction

3.8/5
Goodreads

Author
  
Alberto Moravia

Adaptations
  
Woman of Rome (1954)

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Similar
  
Works by Alberto Moravia, Fiction books

The Woman from Rome (Italian: La romana) is a 1947 novel by Alberto Moravia about the intersecting lives of many characters, chief among them a prostitute (whose mother is also a prostitute) and an idealistic intellectual who, after an interrogation by the Fascist officers, during which he betrays his colleagues (for reasons he himself is not able to understand), becomes completely disillusioned about everything.

Contents

Like many other Alberto Moravia novels and those by other authors of the time, this novel explores the themes of existentialism, morality, and alienation. Even though the novel is about a prostitute, an intellectual who loses his commitment and his belief in everything, and a Fascist officer, it presents compelling insights about the individual and the society, and what links them together, as well as about their respective responsibilities.

Adaptations

The novel was adapted into a film in 1954.

  • In the penultimate Mad Men episode, "The Milk and Honey Route", Don sees a woman at his motel pool reading The Woman of Rome.
  • In the film McVicar. McVicar is seen reading the book in his prison cell.
  • References

    The Woman of Rome Wikipedia