Giuseppe Berto
Giuseppe Berto | |
---|---|
Born | Mogliano Veneto, Italy | 27 December 1914
Died | 1 November 1978 Rome, Italy | (aged 63)
Occupation | Novelist and screenwriter |
Years active | 1947–1978 |
Giuseppe Berto (27 December 1914 – 1 November 1978) was an Italian writer and screenwriter. He is mostly known for his novels Il cielo è rosso (The Sky Is Red) and Il male oscuro.
He was a prisoner of the Hereford Prisoner of War Camp from 1943 to 1946.[1]
Selected works[]
- Il cielo è rosso a novel, published in 1947, about a group of displaced teenagers during World War II (The Sky Is Red – translation by Angus Davidson)
- Opere di Dio short stories, published in 1948 (The Works of God and Other Stories – translation by Angus Davidson)
- Il brigante a novel, published in 1951 (The Brigand – translation by Angus Davidson)
- Il male oscuro a "novel of neurosis and psychoanalysis", which in 1964 won him the Viareggio Prize and the Campiello Prize (Incubus – translation by William Weaver)
- La cosa buffa a novel, published in 1966 (Antonio in Love – translation by William Weaver)
- Anonimo Veneziano a novel, published in 1971 (Anonymous Venetian – translation by Valerie Southorn)
- La Passione secondo noi stessi (The Passion According to Ourselves), a 1972 play (not translated into English)
- La gloria a novel, published in 1978, about Judas's betrayal of Jesus (not translated into English)
Selected filmography[]
- Eleonora Duse (1947)
- La tua donna (1954)
- The Wanderers (1956)
References[]
- ^ "Giuseppe Berto". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
External links[]
- Giuseppe Berto at IMDb
- "The girl goes to Calabria" at The Short Story Project.
Categories:
- 1914 births
- 1978 deaths
- People from Mogliano Veneto
- 20th-century Italian novelists
- 20th-century Italian male writers
- 20th-century Italian screenwriters
- Viareggio Prize winners
- Bancarella Prize winners
- Premio Campiello winners
- Italian male novelists
- Italian male screenwriters
- Italian writer stubs