The Ancient Shore: Dispatches from Naples | 
enlarge | Authors: Shirley Hazzard, Francis Steegmuller Publisher: University Of Chicago Press Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy New: $11.31 You Save: $6.69 (37%)
New (43) Used (9) from $7.00
Rating: 1 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 144 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.8 x 0.7
ISBN: 0226322017 Dewey Decimal Number: 945.731 EAN: 9780226322018
Publication Date: November 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Born in Australia, Shirley Hazzard first moved to Naples as a young woman in the 1950s to take up a job with the United Nations. It was the beginning of a long love affair with the city. Battered by World War II, Naples would remain for decades one of the most violent and impoverished places in Italy, but in its passion, vivacity, and beauty, the city still justified the loving words written about it by Goethe, Byron, and other literary travelers over the centuries. The Ancient Shore collects the best of Hazzard’s writings on Naples, along with a classic New Yorker essay by her late husband, Francis Steegmuller. For the pair, both insatiable readers, the Naples of Pliny, Gibbon, and Auden is constantly alive to them in the present: “The ghosts of this region are too many, and too vital, to sadden us,” Hazzard writes. “Rather, they create a company, ironic and benign, to which we ourselves may ultimately hope to belong.” With Hazzard as our guide, we encounter Henry James, Oscar Wilde, and of course Goethe, but Hazzard’s concern is primarily with the Naples of our own time—often violently unforgiving to innocent tourists, but able to transport the visitor who attends patiently to its rhythms and history. A town shadowed by both the symbol and the reality of Vesuvius can never fail to acknowledge the essential precariousness of life—nor, as the lover of Naples discovers, the human compassion, generosity, and friendship that are necessary to sustain it. Beautifully illustrated by photographs from such masters as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Herbert List, The Ancient Shore is a lyrical letter to a lifelong love: honest and clear-eyed, yet still fervently, endlessly enchanted.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Canta Napoli November 19, 2008 D. R. L. F. (Atlanta, GA) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Ms. Hazzard and Mr. Steegmuller have written a most astute and heart-warming book about Naples, Italy. They have felt the pulse of Naple, the temperament of the locals and written about it in beautiful prose. Naples is always a mixture of chaos and calm; of shouting and respect; of colors and light. As they write, ". . . Neapolitans move among their extraordinary architecture as in a natural element: Even the gradest edifices are not "monuments" but expressions of temperament in their nobility, their strangeness or sweetness, their theatricality." Thankfully Naples is still relatively unvisited by hordes of tourists and remains our personal, secret jewel. Thank you to these authors for capturing its essence and loving (most) all of it !
|
|
|