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Lorenza Mazzetti

    July 26, 1927 – January 4, 2020

    Lorenza Mazzetti is an Italian author and filmmaker whose work delves into the profound depths of personal experience and trauma. Her literary creations, deeply informed by the dramatic events of her childhood, explore themes of loss, memory, and survival with remarkable sensitivity. Beyond her writing, Mazzetti also demonstrated an exceptional talent for unconventional storytelling and visual innovation in experimental film. Her contributions across both artistic mediums reveal a unique ability to transform personal tragedy into universally resonant art.

    The Sky is Falling
    • The Sky is Falling

      • 172 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Penny and Baby, two orphaned girls, recount the final days of fascism through their eyes as war approaches and anti-Semitic persecution affects their adopted uncle. The girls do not understand the world in a general sense, but they possess a rich mythology filled with figures from catechism, fascist propaganda, games with farmers, and life with their great uncle and his guests. This mythology encompasses justice, revenge, good, and evil, while strictly excluding History and its reasons, such as war and persecution, which are foreign to their experience. When war intrudes upon their lives, Penny and Baby encapsulate their pain in a darkness that does not alter their childhood. Published in 1961, Lorenza Mazzetti's book received recognition and awards, including the Viareggio Prize, for its ability to express the innocence of children in the face of horror. Its magical and poetic simplicity suggests a new pact of civilization: to exclude from History all that a child cannot explain, keeping their mythology alive.

      The Sky is Falling1993
      3.8