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Casa Rossa de Francesca Marciano

de Francesca Marciano - Género: Italian
libro gratis Casa Rossa

Sinopsis

Casa Rossa è appartenuta alla famiglia di Alina Strada per oltre settant'anni. E adesso tocca proprio a lei, ad Alina, chiuderla definitivamente, per lasciarla alla coppia australiana che ha deciso di acquistarla. Ma quella casa isolata, circondata da ulivi, che sorge nella campagna a sud di Lecce, non è un semplice edificio: è la storia stessa della famiglia Strada, una storia incominciata negli anni '30 con la nonna, la bellissima, sfuggente Renée, proseguita negli anni '50 e '60 con la madre, Alba, irrequieta e indipendente, e che giunge fino ai giorni nostri, proprio con Isabella e Alina, sorelle lontane in tutto eppure, sorprendentemente, vicinissime.


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This is not a story about what we know, nor about what we have.
This story is about what gets lost on the way.


Francesca Marciano’s Casa Rossa, published in 2002, returned me to the world of the Classic novel, where sweeping, important, astonishing stories are told without stylistic pretense. Casa Rossa crosses many literary borders: it is a political novel with elements of historical fiction; it is a contemporary narrative about relationships and families; it is a novel of place. At its heart, however, it is a work of romanticism. No, no, I don’t mean romance fiction; I mean true literary romanticism: a narrative that values the aesthetic experience of life and the deep emotions it elicits—the belief that we are intuitive, deeply-feeling creatures enthralled with the beauty and horror of the world, before we are rational ones, trying to parse circumstance into logical meaning.

The horrible, beautiful world in which Marciano places us is Italy. What country presents the reader with a greater feast of imagination, with more tantalizing colors, tastes, aromas, than Italy? We think we know this country of sun-dappled fields, earthy wines, and warm hospitality, yet how quickly we forget Italy’s desperate, convoluted, violent past, one that continues to shape its present. And that short memory of how the political becomes personal is the deepest, most pervading theme of Casa Rossa, this story of “what gets lost along the way.”

At the novel’s opening, Alina Strada is packing up all that remains inside her family’s home—the novel’s eponymous Casa Rossa—set outside a small village in Puglia, the deep, southern heel of Italy's long boot. But instead of tidying, Alina's task releases memories, stories, and questions of her family’s, and Italy’s, past.

Casa Rossa takes us through three generations of women: Alina’s grandmother Renée, her mother Alba, and Alina and her sister, Isabella. Betrayal defines Alina's family: Renée’s alleged Nazi sympathies when she abandons her family to join her German lover; Alba’s emotional perfidy with Alina’s beloved father, Oliviero, who dies in mysterious circumstances; Isabella’s political treachery and the surprising double-cross by her lover; and the story’s ultimate betrayal by one sister of another.

Along the way, we see the birth of a modern nation in Italy’s self-conscious but determined turning away from WWII-era fascism toward the ubiquitous evocation of La Dolce Vita. Marciano, a filmmaker and screenwriter, takes us inside the world of Italian cinema as neorealism fades in the 1950s and Commedia all'italiana rises—a unique perspective that adds fragrance and flavor to the story’s heavy drama.

This is an Italy I know very little of—this 1970s and 80s turbulence when young people took to the streets and to back alleys, joining political organizations as a way to force the government to admit to its lies. These young revolutionaries destroyed paradigms and structures; they also destroyed families and sacrificed lives.

There is an intensity and a bravery to Marciano’s female characters that I adore. These women see the world very clearly, without sentimentality, but not without a certain wistfulness and poignancy. I felt that quality so strongly in her 2014 short story collection, The Other Language. Here, in a full-length novel where characters have room to reveal the full nature of their hearts, their pettiness, their flaws, and their dreams, I celebrate the completeness—this combination of vulnerability and power—of Marciano’s women. She writes just as her characters see their world: with the eyes of a journalist and the heart of storyteller, in unsparing, clean, and beautiful language.

What begins as a quiet, contemplative novel of regret and remembrance becomes a taut political and family drama that will break your heart. And quietly, beside a crumbling stone wall in an olive grove, where the heat stills the rustling leaves and sweat trickles between your breasts, you will find that even when broken, your heart beats still.

best-of-2014 italy-theme-setting past-and-present-setting ...more21 s Dagio_maya 970 295

” ..quando meno te l’aspetti, la verità viene a galla e, a quel punto, tutte le impalcature che ci hai costruito sopra crollano in un colpo solo.”


“Casa Rossa” è una masseria che il nonno di Alina – voce narrante- compra negli anni ’30.
Mentre svuota i cassetti e gli armadi di questa casa, ormai prossima alla vendita, Alina racconta e, come è facile intuire, questo è l'espediente che apre le porte al ricordo.

Il nonno Lorenzo era un pittore che da Parigi portò non solo l’esperienza bohémienne ma anche Renée, la moglie tunisina avvolta da un passato misterioso e di cui, poi (dopo aver abbandonato il marito e la figlia Alba), si perdono le tracce .

Dal magico paesaggio della campagna salentina, alla frizzante Roma per poi passare all’avventurosa esperienza newyorchese.

La storia di questa famiglia declina la femminile:
dalla figura fantasmatica di Renèe, che lascia dietro di sé profonde cicatrici, e lascia un'eredità amara fatta di abbandoni e silenzi che saranno un marchio indelebile per tutte le protagoniste.


” Qualcosa è passato di mano in mano da una donna all’altra, nella mia famiglia.
Non so quale nome dargli.
È un segreto, un lascito di cui è bene non si parli. Qualcosa che ci pesa.
È stato proprio quel peso a storpiarci lentamente, l’una dopo l’altra, come il fil di ferro torce il fusto di una pianta.”



Una storia di assenze, silenzi, mancanze e tradimenti che dagli anni ’30 agli anni ’90 si riflette nella Storia pubblica del nostro paese.

Un arco che si tende dal fascismo agli anni di piombo:

” Questa storia qui non è più la storia della tua famiglia. Questa storia ci riguarda tutti, è la nostra. È la storia di una generazione che ha fatto finta di nulla, ha chiuso gli occhi e si è svegliata quando è passato tutto, come se il fascismo fosse stato un sogno, capisci, il sogno di qualcun altro, però. È la storia di tutti quelli che hanno detto: io non c’entravo niente, erano gli altri.”


Sono molto appagata da questa lettura.
Quella soddisfazione di leggere con piacere e con curiosità e non è così scontato.
--------------------------
Francesca Marciano arriva dal mondo del cinema. Da giovane ha recitato in "Pasqualino Settebellezze" di Lina Wertmuller e in altri film di Pupi Avati. Ha avuto esperienze di regia ma è con la scrittura cinematografica che si è realizzata.
Sue le sceneggiature di "Turné" (1991) e "Maledetto il giorno che t'ho incontrato" (1994) a "Io non ho paura" (2003) e "La bestia nel cuore" (2005).
"Casa rossa" ha vinto il Premio Rapallo Carige per la donna scrittrice 2003 ed io mi meraviglio che non abbia ricevuto più attenzioni dalle lettrici e dai lettori...

https://archivio.festivaletteratura.i...alfemminile italiana13 s Harold Johnson17 3

After reading a novel this and others I have read this year, for example, the Goldfinch, I do not understand why there should even be any debate about the death of the novel. Based on my reading experience novels and novelists are alive and and healthy, apparently doing quite well in the old art of story telling.

Ms Maricano writes about a particularly interesting part of the world, southern Italy, namely Puglia near Lecce and Rome, and a particular time in history which is that period in which Italy became fascistic and afterward experienced the birth of the republic and the horrible years of the Red Brigades.

This is one of those fascinating looks at three generations of a family that was strongly affected by all these currents of history. On a more intimate level it is about three women, the grandmother, her daughter Alba, and Alba's two girls Isabella and Alina. The youngest daughter is the voice in the novel, and a most interesting voice it is, a voice of a girl who becomes a woman through dealing with all the family pathology of three generations as well as her own particular period of coming of age.

I found the book a fascinating read. Although Italian is not my first language (actually it can be read in English as the author actually wrote the book in English first but found that she had to change the Italian version as the first one was so much influenced by the english language) , I found the book to be one of those that I could hardly put down as the character development and plot development are well done, so true to life..

The grandmother, Renee, is only written about, never a character but who appears throughout the book in the form of a mural painted on the garden wall of the Casa Rossa (The Red House), the family home in Puglia. Even though the mural was painted over by the grandfather's second wife, the faint image remains and appears more clearly on the last page of the novel. Her daughter Alba, beautiful, seemingly uninvolved with her two daughters throughout emerges as a life force and a fascinating character as she grows and develops. I will leave it to the reader to find out what happened to the daughters, one of whom is the storyteller.

It was a book which I never wanted to end and missed the characters and the storyteller, Alina, a lot the next day.fiction10 s LucyAuthor 7 books104

I want to write at her caliber one day.4 s Sarah1,557

I'm not sure if it was because I lack sufficient knowledge on politics in Italy or if it was the cool and reserved tone, but I never felt fully engaged with this novel. I wanted to care about Alina and Isa and Alba because I sensed that I should, but mostly this just left me feeling restless and agitated. 3 s Jenna Meyers68 4

Oh this book was wonderful and unexpected in the best ways. I already loved Marciano and now I am officially obsessed.2 s Em47

Francesca Marciano is indeed my favorite writer. After discovering her in Rules of the Wild, I am so lucky to have found another title of hers, Casa Rossa. I am so interested in her writings that I immediately started off with this book after purchasing it.

I consider Francesca Marciano as a high-caliber author. Her language is very intelligent and very real. Her kind of writing is what young adults need nowadays – the kind of writing that enlightens and feeds the aggressive, curious, impulsive, restless and searching mind of youth and at the same time makes socio-political issues surface.

Casa Rossa is a family saga of three generations. It began with Lorenzo, an artist who bought the crumbling farmhouse in Puglia, Italy. Since that day, it became witness to the history of his family – his wife, daughter and granddaughters.

Lorenzo married Renée whose association with the Nazi has remained a mystery. Her unhappiness made her leave Casa Rossa to live with a German woman. The family’s fate has stemmed down to Alba, Lorenzo and Renée’s daughter, and to Isabella and Alina, their granddaughters.

Alba suffered the same unhappiness in spite of having the husband, Oliviero, a playwright, who loved her deeply. Oliviero’s death remained a mystery that engulfed the rest of Alba’s life.

Isabella and Alina, the two ill-fated daughters of Alba and Oliviero suffered tragedies, too, in different forms. They turned into rivals for the love of two men on different times of their lives. Isabella, an activist, became a political prisoner for about a decade – the crucial years that destroyed her into pieces.

Casa Rossa is an unforgettable tale of family in the face of tragedy, mystery and politics.

http://flipthrough.wordpress.com/2010...collection contemporary-classic favorite2 s Beata125 3

I that the story's main characters were women. Women who cared, loved, rebelled, learned, taught and hurt. It is often said that you can't trust the narrator but here I did, completely. Because she didn't hide her own weaknesses and faults. As much as the story is about secrets, unanswered questions, she didn't hide from us her own secrets, thoughts or feelings.
I knew nothing about this part of Italy's history. I love to learn what happened through such stories. It resonates more that any textbook, and will probably stay with me longer too.
Can't wait to discuss it with my book club. So glad I picked it - Thanks to Julie whose I love, and teach me too!! 2015-book-club2 s Jeanne JulianAuthor 7 books6

I guess I thought this was going to be a different KIND of book from what it was. But even after I "got" it, I thought it was a little draggy. I did learning more about the political situation in Italy. I d an insight into how one sister could become radicalized to the point where violence made sense to her, while the other doesn't--and their relationship rang true. The backstory and the other characters seemed blurry.2 s Becky339

I honestly tried getting into this book, but it was so slow. I read about 100 pages and decided that I didn't really care what had happened to any of the characters. They all had annoying features, that if in reality, probably wouldn't bug me, but since I had so much time with them, it was all I could focus on. I loved the romance of the Italian setting, but that was about it.2 s Sharon164

It's well written. I stopped about 1/2 way through, because it didn't capture my interest anymore. 2 s Saleh MoonWalker1,801 265

Onvan : Casa Rossa - Nevisande : Francesca Marciano - ISBN : 375726373 - ISBN13 : 9780375726378 - Dar 352 Safhe - Saal e Chap : 2002contemporary cultural fiction ...more1 Ana Beatriz11

This is an awesome read. A very well-written romance. Delightful, unexpected. About three generations of an Italian family and their conflicts. Life carries on, even after deep heartbreaks. 1 Sanna200 4

Alku vaikutti tylsältä ja meinasin jättää tämän jo kesken. Sitten alkoikin tapahtua ja loppuosa vei jo mukanaan. Ihan ok aloitus tälle kirjavuodelle.1 Mo214 2

Found this an enjoyable, engaging read, though probably not one I need to revisit. Examines Italy's history in the latter half of the 20th century through the microcosm of a family from Puglia. A major theme of the book is guilt, collective and individual, and how it doesn't go away even if you keep it secret. I d the supporting characters of Renée, Alba, and Isabella, but thought the narrator came across as passive and very much uninvolved in the political happenings around her - which isn't de facto a weakness in a book, but in this case I felt it detracted because the things that most affect Alina are personal ones, disconnected from the greater national events that cause the guilt that's the theme of the novel. She doesn't voice any opinions of her own about leftist terrorism or in fact leftism in general (beyond the general "killing is bad" type), even though she says she read all about it as a student and her sister is involved in the movement. More insight into what the Red Brigades actually believed and were trying to accomplish would've given the book some greater depth and grounding. Though perhaps that's just my overriding interest in historical fact talking.contemporarylit1 Judith E607 233

The last book I read had no flow - excruciating. But this one, from beginning to end - this baby flows! I love Francesca Marciano's writing about women and geography. Her descriptions of land, houses, smells, and plants are masterful. In Casa Rosa, her women evolve and are exposed as complicated beings who are strong or weak and who love, hate, forgive and compromise. This is a beautiful story that also reveals the tumultuous political scene in 1970's Italy.fiction historical-fiction1 Safiya76 6

Very moving, very raw story of a family over 3 generations, but the first two are not too detailed, as everything is told by the grand-daughter, who doesn't have all the information, a bit in real life, which makes the story even more poignant.novel1 Anayansi83 2

Bittersweet. Raw. Intense. Haunting. All the characters in this multigenerational tale are analyzed to their core and so are you, as you end up relating to all of them. A love letter to the South of Italy and the dog days of summer.1 Lidia121 3

Great book about love, history and life. It was very-well written, with lovebable characters, interesting and intriguing plot. You get to know a lot about Italian history and what happened during the years of fasicism.1 Carol226

Absolutely loved this family saga set in Puglia, Italy. Marciano is a master story teller.... the plot is intricate at times, weaving from 3 generations of a family whose house Casa Rossa ties them to each other. Beautifully written.1 Beth Hartnett932

I love discovering a new author who I can't get enough of. I first read Marciano's collection of international short stories and was hooked. This novel, set in Italy and in New York City, kept me completely enthralled. I can't wait to read another one of her novels!1 stella12 4

this is a must read---- and you won't be able to stop reading. you can't!! i want to go write from a house in southern italy with cappuccinos and my dogs..1 Erica30 4

loved it.....consistently entertaining.1 Gwendolyn327

Read 116 pages and don't feel finishing. Where is this going? Who are these people? Why do I care?1 Greta ???96 5

Storia di una famiglia, o meglio delle donne di una famiglia.

Si inizia da Renée, ragazza ribelle e indomabile, incapace di vivere nella tranquillità della campagna leccese insieme al marito e alla figlia ancora bambina. Renée non riesce a stabilirsi in un posto in modo definitivo, è uno spirito libero e, non appena ne avrà l’occasione, fuggirà da quella vita da reclusa e dalle sue responsabilità di moglie e madre.

Alba, figlia di Renée, dovrà fare i conti per tutta la vita con il fantasma della madre, diventata una vera e propria ossessione per il padre di Alba. Pur non essendo fisicamente presente, Renée è una costante della sua vita. Alba ha due figlie, Isabella e Alina, ma non è in grado di svolgere al meglio il ruolo di madre: tende ad evitare il confronto, fugge dalle possibili liti, è spesso assente, infelice, alla continua ricerca di un uomo.
Nei momenti di crisi, Alba sembra riscuotersi, comprende che le figlie hanno bisogno di lei e fa del suo meglio. A un certo punto Alina si rende conto che sua madre è, a modo suo, una creatura perfetta, votata alla sopravvivenza e all’autoconservazione.

Isabella, al contrario della madre, è molto aggressiva a parole e, più tardi, anche nei fatti (si unirà a un gruppo armato di estrema sinistra). Attacca con parole dure il comportamento sfuggevole di Alba, la accusa della morte insensata del padre (morto suicida).

Alina, voce narrante del romanzo, affronta la morte del padre gettandosi nella droga. Prima che sia troppo tardi riesce a trovare la forza di rialzarsi e si trasferisce a New York per iniziare una nuova vita. Trova un lavoro e un fidanzato, sembra essersi lasciata il passato alle spalle, finché Isabella non viene arrestata e accusata di terrorismo ai danni dello stato.

In conclusione
Alba scopre una lettera di Renée al marito, in cui chiede di non mentire sul suo conto alla figlia, che altrimenti crescerà piena di rancore. Sembra che, avendo riscoperto il proprio ruolo di figlia, Alba sia pronta ad impegnarsi seriamente nel ruolo di madre e nonna.
Isabella, dopo 6 anni di carcere, durante i quali riallaccia i rapporti con la madre e soprattutto con la sorella, torna alla vita. Si innamora del compagno di Alina, ricambiata, si sposano e hanno due bambine.
Alina, distrutta dalla storia tra la sorella e l’uomo che credeva l’amore della sua vita, troncherà i rapporti con entrambi per anni. Nel frattempo, rimette in piedi la propria vita e decide di “ridare vita” a una vecchia sceneggiatura del padre. Torna a far parte della vita di Isabella quando scopre che la sorella ha avuto un crollo nervoso.

Il rimpianto è uno dei temi centrali del romanzo, l’incapacità di stare vicino a chi si ama senza ferirlo o esserne feriti. Alba vorrebbe essere una buona madre, Alina vorrebbe essere una buona figlia, Isabella una buona sorella. Ma spesso non ci riescono.
Ma è anche un libro sulla rinascita, le seconde occasioni, l’imprevedibilità della vita. La vita di una famiglia tra gelosie, ansie, preoccupazioni, dolori e sofferenze, ma anche tra gioie, pianti di felicità, risate e tanto amore. Perché alla fine Alina sceglie di perdonare Isabella, di conoscere le sue nipotine, di parlare con suo cognato. Perché entrambi la amano e le vogliono stare accanto. This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.Show full review Jennifer SpiegelAuthor 9 books91 Read

I Francesca Marciano. I first read RULES OF THE WILD back in 1998--and I still think of it in a pivotal, rock-my-world sort of way. I have read most of her other books, and they're all rather good, as is this one. I can't say my world was rocked. I can say that I d it and I'm glad I read it, though I found the cover borderline embarrassing. (My husband picked it up and said, "YOU'RE reading a romance novel!!!!!!")

Basically, this kinda amazing farmhouse/estate called Casa Rossa in Italy exists at the center of family drama, involving good-looking Italian people, some infidelity, a bit of terrorism, and the movie scene. We also dip into SoHo in Manhattan for the art world and Rome when we go to the Big City in Italy. It's pretty glamorous.

Glamor-read.

After I wrote that down, I wondered if I had coined a new term. So I looked it up, and found this (it fits):
https://www.collegefashion.net/colleg... Colette197 106

What an unexpected joy to discover and read this beautifully written book while visiting Puglia with my daughter. There was so much I related to in this book- being an Italian American who's family emigrated from Bari, a mother of two girls two years apart and reading about the character of Lecce and the Salento region of Italy while there. At one point I was literally eating a pasticiotto in Lecce while reading about a character eating a pasticiotto in Italy. So fun! Beyond that I found the story an engrossing tale of the complexities of human nature and relationships which is my favorite thing to read about. In some parts, Marciano reminded me of Elena Ferrante. Both authors have the ability to bring dark aspects of character to light with just the right words and I'd be interested to read more from this author. Though it came out in the 90's, it felt surprisingly modern, even in its retrospective take on history and if you're going to Italy and want to get in the mood, I highly recommend this book as a delightful, thought provoking travel companion. Jennifer98 1 follower

I’m not sure why it took me so long to finish this book. It felt I fell in and out of love with this story a dozen times. The characters are complicated. It’s hard to any of them! What I loved was the writing. There are parts that are so good at telling the heart and they are cleverly written. The dialog is probably what lost me because I was uninterested in what they were saying and more interested in hearing the author describe it. Overall, it was tough read. I would recommend it to only my most faithful reader-friends. Stasi245 4

It probably merits at least 2 stars, but I have a policy that I don't give more than 1 to any book I can't finish. I was just bored reading this. I gave it about 80 pages and then gave up.

Bummer, because I chose it due to the location (Puglia, which I'm visiting this summer) - there were glimpses of it and I'm sure if I'd stuck it out, I'd have more of a sense of the location. Maybe I'll try it again when I'm actually there.d-n-f Kathryn E3

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