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Last edited by Gabriella Bianco
October 14, 2012 | History
In this precious poetic autobiography, Gabriella Bianco tells the final hour of an existence, that of her son Robert Steve Bingham, needing to reveal this secret to her son's father Stephen M. Bingham, as a moral and absolute duty. From the point of view of the truth and the death of a child, this text s sacred and reaches a deep dramatic effect, as it is so painfully connected to her own story, that of her son and her son's father.
This valuable story always speaks about love, charging this word with immense emotion, whisperig words in their agonizing beauty.
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Subjects
autobiographyPlaces
Venice, Urbino, the Dolomites, the Adriatic Sea (Italy)Times
1972 - 1973Edition | Availability |
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Infinitas lunas, infinitos soles: Infinite Moons, Infinite Suns
2010, Editorial Dunken - Buenos Aires
Hardcover
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Book Details
Table of Contents
In this precious poetic autobiography, Gabriella Bianco not only tells the final hour of an existence—that of her son Robert Steve—but also the loss of a great love, in a world full of absences. Gabriella Bianco challenges her destiny, inviting us to the caducity of all that surrounds us—feelings, love, life and even the most precious gift, a son.
In the loving relation not only with language and poetry, but also with the drama of life, Bianco needs to reveal a secret—her son’s death—and share it with her son’s father, as a moral and absolute duty. From the point of view of the truth and the death of a child, this text is sacred, although, refusing to take the place of the victim under the circumstances, Bianco knows—like all tragic heroes—that nothing different would have been possible with her destiny.
This valuable literary narration reaches a deeply dramatic effect, as it is so painfully connected to a vital experience. The story always speaks about love, charging this word with immense emotion, whispering words in their agonizing beauty. Bianco tells us what she knows about herself and about the facts, digging in her own soul, with perplexity and nostalgia.
In this story, the past is a split mirror, where nothing turned out to be the same. Here the theme of love has the marks of time and renunciation, the mark of destiny. In this narration, Bianco reaches a balance of great beauty, between said and unspoken words, between suggested and implicit thoughts, in a great richness of nuances, when the text turns unstable, facing the emotions stirred up by this testimony.
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October 14, 2012 | Edited by Gabriella Bianco | Please, include this edition with front picture in the general list. Thank you. |
September 26, 2012 | Edited by Gabriella Bianco | Added new cover |
July 8, 2012 | Edited by Gabriella Bianco | Edited without comment. |
May 14, 2011 | Edited by 186.110.136.17 | Added new cover |
October 17, 2010 | Created by Gabriella Bianco | Added new book. |