One of the most beloved writers of his generation, Antonio Tabucchi
was born in Pisa in 1943 and died in Lisbon in 2012. A master of
short fiction, he won the Prix Medicis Etranger for Indian
Nocturne, the Italian PEN Prize for Requiem- A Hallucination, the
Aristeion European Literature for Pereira Declares, and was named a
Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government.
Together with his wife, Maria Jose de Lancastre, Tabucchi
translated much of the work of Fernando Pessoa into Italian.
Tabucchi's works include Little Misunderstandings of No Importance,
Letter from Casablanca, The Edge of the Horizon, and The Woman of
Porto Pim.
Tim Parks teaches literary translation at IULM University in Milan.
He is a literary critic and the author of An Italian Education, The
Server, Dreams of Rivers and Seas, and Teach Us to Sit Still. Twice
winner of the John Florio Prize for translation, Parks has
translated works by Alberto Moravia, Italo Calvino, Roberto
Calasso, Niccol Machiavelli, Fleur Jaeggy, and Antonio Tabucchi.
There is in Tabucchi’s stories the touch of the true magician, who
astonishes us by never trying too hard for his subtle, elusive and
remarkable effects. —The San Francisco Examiner
Tabucchi’s work has an almost palpable sympathy for the oppressed.
—The New York Times
By now the appearance of a new novel by Antonio Tabucchi is a
literary event. —World Literature Today
Like good short fiction, the stories in this volume act in ways
that suggest a wider world outside the frame of the story.
—Sycamore Review
A witty and subtle meditation on the limitations of memory and
imagination. —Nick Hornby, Times Literary Supplement
[Tabucchi's] prose creates a deep, near-profound and sometimes
heart-wrenching nostalgia and constantly evokes the pain of
recognizing the speed of life's passing which everyone knows but
few have the strength to accept ... Wonderfully thought-provoking
and beautiful. —Alan Cheuse, NPR's All Things Considered
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