She steers us to one more Madonna with Child, the center of an altarpiece painted by Bernardino di Betto, better known as Pintoricchio, in 1495 or 1496. It is all glimmering blues and reds and golds. “Look, there,” she exclaims, pointing to the bottom of the painting. At the Madonna’s feet, just off the gold hem of her azure robe, are three gnarly looking apples—oddly shaped varieties you’d never see in a market today.
For most viewers, they would be an afterthought. For Dalla Ragione, the apples, including a variety known in the fruit science lexicon as api piccola, represent a key to restoring Italy’s disappearing fruit agriculture, with characteristics not found in today’s apples: Crunchy and tart, they are capable of being stored at room temperature for about seven months and maintain their best qualities outside the fridge. Mark Schapiro, SmithsonianUSALIBRI
Rassegna della stampa culturale americana e inglese. Segnalazioni di novità in libreria, articoli, interviste, dibattiti, idee e pettegolezzi.
3.11.24
Meet the Italian ‘Fruit Detective’
27.10.24
Sonny Boy
Sonny Boy: A Memoir by Al Pacino is published by Century
20.10.24
Bookselling Out
My daughter and I were the only browsers in a small bookstore when a woman entered to ask how to find a nearby donut shop. “So I’m in the wrong place altogether,” she replied to the bookseller’s instructions. “Unless you’d like to buy a book,” said the bookseller. The woman laughed and left. [...]
Bookstores are struggling. We might say The Bookshop is the story of a rise and fall. Friss offers a bleak analysis in his final pages, explaining how the vaunted indie comeback of the last few years depends on misleading data from the ABA. According to the U.S. Census, “between 2012 and 2021, the number of bookstores dropped by 34 percent.” Dan Sinykin, The Baffler
The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore by Evan Friss (Viking).
13.10.24
The Jazz Singer
Il primo film sonoro – prodotto dalla stessa Warner e proiettato per la prima volta il 27 ottobre 1927 – fu Il cantante di jazz (The Jazz Singer) nel quale, oltre a varie canzoni, si udivano una frase rivolta al pubblico dal protagonista e un breve dialogo tra questi e la madre. Il protagonista, interpretato da Al Johnson, è un ragazzo ebreo che non vuole cantare in sinagoga, come hanno fatto tutti i maschi di famiglia prima di lui, perché ama il jazz. Nel film canta però Kol Nidre, in una versione molto commovente. A proposito del Kippur appena trascorso.
7.10.24
7 ottobre, un anno dal pogrom
What shocked many people about the student letter was its heartlessness. Even as the bodies were being counted, the signers told us not to blame the killers but to redirect our gaze, and fix all responsibility on Israel. The Chronicle of Higher Education
6.10.24
Rebecca Watson: ‘What are siblings: twisted reflections of ourselves? Allies? Enemies?
I Will Crash by Rebecca Watson is published by Faber.
29.9.24
The 2024 Booker prize shortlist
Shortlisted alongside them are American
writer Rachel Kushner with Creation Lake and Yael van der Wouden, the
first Dutch writer to be shortlisted and lone debut novelist to feature
with The Safekeep. Completing this year’s shortlist is Percival Everett
with James, his retelling of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of
the enslaved Jim. The Guardian
22.9.24
Tell me everything
sempre sul Guardian, un elenco dei libri di narrativa e saggistica in uscita quest'autunno
15.9.24
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky
The first time Pevear, 81, and Volokhonsky, 78, translated a
Russian novel together, it felt as though another man had joined their
marriage: Dostoyevsky.
“It was a mariage à trois,” Volokhonsky said. “Dostoyevsky was always in our mind. We just lived with him.”
Since that first translation published in 1990 — it was “The Brothers Karamazov,” Dostoyevsky’s immense final novel — Pevear and Volokhonsky have become reigning translators of Russian literature, publishing an average of one volume per year. Their work includes classics by Tolstoy and Chekhov, as well as lesser-known books and works by contemporary writers like the Nobel laureate Svetlana Alexievich. In their reach, the couple are making vast swaths of Russia’s written word available to the West, for which they have received both adulation and full-throated condemnation. Instagram New York Times
8.9.24
Science meets art in Brown engineering course
Using the scientific principles behind fluid mechanics, students in a School of Engineering course produced stunning imagery brought to life via high-speed photography.
Conducting the experiment as part of Engineering 0350: Art Fluid
Engineering, the students’ goal was to capture stunning imagery, using
high-speed photography, of the different ways liquids can splash. The
end product is meant to show how the work of scientists and engineers,
and the fundamental laws and principles they rely on, can also be
applied to artistic creation. News from Brown