An edition of The mother sea (1967)

The mother sea.

[1st American ed.]
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The mother sea.
Dominique Fernandez
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Last edited by MARC Bot
October 4, 2020 | History
An edition of The mother sea (1967)

The mother sea.

[1st American ed.]
  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

The author takes the reader on a journey that begins in Naples ("Naples is black and bare. Naples, with its din and daualor, appears barbaric to the traveler who comes down from Rome, although no other city on the peninsula is so subtle, ingenious or civilized"), proceeds to Southern Italy, thence to Sardinia, and ends in Sicily ("Have the Sicilians not known everything already? Have they not, from Empedocles to Pirancello, written everything?. . . . They have known such a lot, precisely, and drawn at all the wells of knowledge, that their science has become blurred").

Publish Date
Publisher
Hill and Wang
Language
English
Pages
236

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The mother sea.
The mother sea.
1967, Hill and Wang
in English - [1st American ed.]
Cover of: The mother sea
The mother sea
1967, Secker & Warburg
in English

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Book Details


First Sentence

"Naples is black and bare. Naples, with its din and squalor, appears barbaric to the traveler who comes down from Rome, although no other city on the peninsula is so subtle, ingenious or civilized."

Table of Contents

NAPLES.
Antiquity of memory Page 9
Fragility, atrophy, insecurity Page 10
Dilemma Page 15
Towns, women, children Page 19
Dilemma (continued) Page 29
Night and Tremors Page 31
Vain history Page 35
SOUTH.
The Southern Issue Page 45
Misfortune Page 54
A conquered General, a victorious sun-bather-and St. Joseph Page 63
Magna Graecia Page 69
The eagle and the eye Page 76
SARDINIA.
Angels Page 89
Dawn, courage, curves Page 93
Dead water, sacred water, running water, bitter water Page 96
The peculiar history of the Lake of Cabras Page 103
Mother Mediterranean Page 106
A short glossary of happiness in Sardinia Page 112
A book-seller, a philosopher and a potter Page 146
SICILY.
Gentlemen versus The Rest Page 155
Religion in Palermo Page 160
Comforts and impostures Page 163
Agrigento Page 173
Honour Page 182
Catania Page 187
An honest man Page 196
A hero Page 206
Paladins, puppets, dwarfs Page 219

Edition Notes

Translation of Mére Méditerranéa.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
914.5
Library of Congress
DG821 .F413

The Physical Object

Pagination
236 p.
Number of pages
236

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL5545184M
LCCN
67023521
OCLC/WorldCat
1337297

First Sentence

"Naples is black and bare. Naples, with its din and squalor, appears barbaric to the traveler who comes down from Rome, although no other city on the peninsula is so subtle, ingenious or civilized."

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
October 4, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
May 16, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
November 27, 2009 Edited by 71.98.207.134 I put in the List of Contents; Also wrote in the "Descrription" box; and "The first sentence".
November 27, 2009 Edited by 71.98.207.134 Edited without comment.
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record.