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Alberto Moravia

  • Alberto Moravia
  • Pseudo
November 28, 1907 – September 26, 1990
Alberto Moravia
Agostino
Boredom
The Conformist
Contempt
The Woman of Rome
Nové rímske poviedky
  • 2014

    Agostino

    • 111 pages
    • 4 hours of reading
    3.8(342)Add rating

    Thirteen-year-old Agostino is spending the summer at a Tuscan seaside resort with his beautiful widowed mother. When she takes up with a cocksure new companion, Agostino, feeling ignored and unloved, begins hanging around with a group of local young toughs. Though repelled by their squalor and brutality, and repeatedly humiliated for his weakness and ignorance when it comes to women and sex, the boy is increasingly, masochistically drawn to the gang and its rough games. He finds himself unable to make sense of his troubled feelings. Hoping to be full of manly calm, he is instead beset by guilty curiosity and an urgent desire to sever, at any cost, the thread of troubled sensuality that binds him to his mother. Alberto Moravia’s classic, startling portrait of innocence lost was written in 1942 but rejected by Fascist censors and not published until 1944, when it became a best seller and secured the author the first literary prize of his career. Revived here in a new translation by Michael F. Moore, Agostino is poised to captivate a twenty-first-century audience.

    Agostino
  • 1999

    Contempt is a brilliant and unsettling work by one of the revolutionary masters of modern European literature. All the qualities for which Alberto Moravia is justly famous ~~ his cool clarity of expression, his exacting attention to psychological complexity and social pretension, his still-striking openness about sex—are evident in this story of a failing marriage. Contempt (which was to inspire Jean-Luc Godard’s no-less-celebrated film) is an unflinching examination of desperation and self-deception in the emotional vacuum of modern consumer society.

    Contempt
  • 1999

    Set against the backdrop of Mussolini's Rome, the narrative follows Adriana, a young woman whose beauty leads her into a life of modeling and relationships with men. As she navigates her choices, she struggles to pinpoint the moment she forsakes her dreams of a traditional home and family, ultimately becoming a prostitute. The novel explores themes of desire, exploitation, and the stark contrast between personal aspirations and societal pressures.

    The Woman of Rome
  • 1990
  • 1976

    "To begin with I'd like to talk about my wife. To love means, in addition to many other things, to delight in gazing upon and observing the beloved." --From Conjugal Love When Silvio, a rich Italian dilettante, and his beautiful wife agree to move to the country and forgo sex so that he will have the energy to write a successful novel, something is bound to go wrong: Silvio's literary ambitions are far too big for his second-rate talent, and his wife Leda is a passionate woman. This dangerously combustible situation is set off when Leda accuses Antonio, the local barber who comes every morning to shave Silvio, of trying to molest her. Silvio obstinately refuses to dismiss him, and the quarrel and its shattering consequences put the couple's love to the test.

    Conjugal love
  • 1973
  • 1969