ISBN 0 7206 1232
2
Fiction
256pp
Paperback
£9.95
May 2005 |
Cuore
The Heart of a Boy
Edmondo de Amicis
Cuore is the fictional diary of a young boy's life in a Turin
school. Written by a former
professional soldier in the aftermath of the Italian war
for independence and the Unification of Italy in 1870,
the book
was intended to foster an appreciation of national identity.
It has been required reading for generations of Italians
to the present day, has been reprinted in more than five
hundred
editions and translated into twenty-five languages.
The narrator, Enrico, writes vividly of life in the classroom
and in the local streets, portraying the achievements and
setbacks, pleasures and pains of growing up in a late nineteenth-century
Italian community. The essentially simple language of the
child
provides insights into family life and education in a provincial
town. His journals are interspersed with letters from his
parents encouraging him to be industrious, kind, honest,
loyal and respectful. These exhortations are reinforced
by stories about children whose selfless deeds demonstrate
the patriotism, sense of duty and love of family to which
the young Italian citizen should aspire.
Cuore has been adapted into almost every conceivable medium,
including films, major television series, radio adaptations,
plays and comic books. It has even become a cult anime
film in Japan. From Henry Miller, who wrote a glowing
monograph
on the book, to world-famous tenor Andrea Bocelli, who
composed a song about it, this account of childhood has
inspired many
and continues to do so to this day.
‘A moving account of childhood.’ – Le
Monde
‘An Italian classic.’ – Book Report
‘Oh, the power, the beauty, the fervour and the pathos of
that book!’
– Charles Warren Stoddard
EDMONDO DE AMICIS was born in Piedmont
in 1846, at a time when Italy lay dismembered. A soldier
by
profession, he spent much of his youth fighting for a united
Italy. An admirer of the writer Alessandro Manzoni, who considered
that Florentine should be the standard Italian language,
he wrote only in Florentine Italian. With the huge
success of Cuore he achieved his goal of having had – through
his novel’s central place on the school syllabus– a
formative influence on the written language of modern Italy.
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