The groundbreaking, moving essay on the coronavirus pandemic shared over 4 million times in Italy and published in 25 countries around the world-which lucidly explains how disease spreads and how our interconnectedness will save us. "Lucid, calm, informed, directly helpful in trying to think about where we are now... The literature of the time after begins here." --Evening Standard (UK) In this extraordinarily elegant work written from lockdown in Italy as the crisis deepened day to day, Paolo Giordano, the internationally bestselling writer of The Solitude of Prime Numbers with a PhD in physics, shows us what this outbreak really is about: human interconnectedness. Illuminating the big picture of how the disease spreads with great simplicity and mathematical insight and placing it in the context of other modern crises like climate change and xenophobia, Giordano reveals how battling the pandemic is ultimately about realizing how inextricably linked all our lives are and acting accordingly. Both timely and timeless, How Contagion Works is an accessible, deeply felt meditation on what it means to confront this pandemic both as individuals and as a community and empowers us not to show fear in the face of it.
From the author of Heaven and Earth, a searing novel of the journey from youth into manhood A heartrending, at times darkly comic but ultimately redemptive novel, Paolo Giordano’s The Human Body is an exploration of brotherhood and family, of modern war and the wars we wage within ourselves. It is a novel that reminds us of what it means to be human. A platoon of young men and a single woman leave Italy for one of the most dangerous places on earth. At their forward operating base in Afghanistan—an exposed sandpit scorched by inescapable sunlight and mortar fire—this band of inexperienced soldiers navigates the irreversible journey from youth to adulthood. But when a much-debated mission goes devastatingly awry, their lives are changed in an instant. And on their return home, they will confront the most difficult challenge of all: to create a life worth living.
“From aide to nanny and housekeeper . . . Paolo Giordano examines this unusual relationship in the context of one household of three. . . . Spare, elegant.”–The New York Times “Like Family. . . demands to be savored. . . Giordano's emphasis on how we choose to live and love offers subtle hope that our decisions actually matter.”—NPR.org From the author of Heaven and Earth, an exquisite portrait of marriage, adulthood, and the meaning of family Paolo Giordano’s prizewinning debut novel, The Solitude of Prime Numbers, catapulted the young Italian author into the literary spotlight. His new novel features his trademark character-driven narrative and intimate domestic setting that first made him an international sensation. When Mrs. A. first enters the narrator’s home, his wife, Nora, is experiencing a difficult pregnancy. First as their maid and nanny, then their confidante, this older woman begins to help her employers negotiate married life, quickly becoming the glue in their small household. She is the steady, maternal influence for both husband and wife, and their son, Emanuele, whom she protects from his parents’ expectations and disappointments. But the family’s delicate fabric comes undone when Mrs. A. is diagnosed with cancer. Moving seamlessly between the past and present, Giordano highlights with remarkable precision the joy of youth and the fleeting nature of time. An elegiac, heartrending, and deeply personal portrait of marriage and the people we choose to call family, this is a jewel of a novel—short, intense, and unforgettable.
A powerful, epic novel of four friends as they grapple with desire, youth, death, and faith in a sweeping story by the international bestselling author of The Solitude of Prime Numbers “Perfect, moving, honest, brilliant, with characters who feel like old friends.” —Andrew Sean Greer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Less “Heaven and Earth is a stunning achievement and confirms him as an electrifying presence in contemporary fiction.” —André Aciman, author of Call Me by Your Name and Find Me Every summer Teresa follows her father to his childhood home in Puglia, down in the heel of Italy, a land of relentless, shimmering heat, centuries-old olive groves and families who have lived there for generations. She spends long afternoons enveloped in a sunstruck stupor, reading her grandmother's paperbacks. Everything changes the summer she meets the three boys who live on the farm next door: Nicola, Tommaso and Bern—the man Teresa will love for the rest of her life. Raised like brothers on a farm that feels to Teresa almost suspended in time, the three boys share a complex, intimate, and seemingly unassailable bond. But no bond is unbreakable and no summer truly endless, as Teresa soon discovers. Because there is resentment underneath the surface of that strange brotherhood, a twisted kind of love that protects a dark secret. And when Bern—the enigmatic, restless gravitational center of the group—commits a brutal act of revenge, not even a final pilgrimage to the edge of the world will be enough to bring back those perfect, golden hours in the shadow of the olive trees. An unforgettable story of enduring love, the bonds between men, and the all-too-human search for meaning, Heaven and Earth is Paolo Giordano at his best: an author capable of unveiling the depths of the human soul, who has now given us the old-fashioned pleasure of a big, sprawling novel in which to lose ourselves.
Mesmerizing...an exquisite rendering of what one might call feelings at the subatomic level." -The New York Times From the author of Heaven and Earth, a sensational novel about whether a "prime number" can ever truly connect with someone else A prime number is a lonely thing. It can only be divided by itself or by one, and it never truly fits with another. Alice and Mattia are both "primes"-misfits haunted by early tragedies. When the two meet as teenagers, they recognize in each other a kindred, damaged spirit. Years later, a chance encounter reunites them and forces a lifetime of concealed emotion to the surface. But can two prime numbers ever find a way to be together? A brilliantly conceived and elegantly written debut novel, The Solitude of Prime Numbers is a stunning meditation on loneliness, love, and what it means to be human.
«Se proprio dovessi, sceglierei la Tasmania. Ha buone riserve di acqua dolce, si trova in uno stato democratico e non ospita predatori per l'uomo. Non è troppo piccola ma è comunque un'isola, quindi facile da difendere. Perché ci sarà da difendersi, mi creda». Tasmania è un romanzo sul futuro. Il futuro che temiamo e desideriamo, quello che non avremo, che possiamo cambiare, che stiamo costruendo. La paura e la sorpresa di perdere il controllo sono il sentimento del nostro tempo, e la voce calda di Paolo Giordano sa raccontarlo come nessun'altra. Ci ritroviamo tutti in questo romanzo sensibilissimo, vivo, contemporaneo. Perché ognuno cerca la sua Tasmania: un luogo in cui, semplicemente, sia possibile salvarsi. Ci sono momenti in cui tutto cambia. Succede una cosa, scatta un clic, e il fiume in cui siamo immersi da sempre prende a scorrere in un'altra direzione. La chiamiamo crisi. Il protagonista di questo romanzo è un giovane uomo attento e vibratile, pensava che la scienza gli avrebbe fornito tutte le risposte ma si ritrova davanti un muro di domande. Con lui ci sono Lorenza che sa aspettare, Novelli che studia la forma delle nuvole, Karol che ha trovato Dio dove non lo stava cercando, Curzia che smania, Giulio che non sa come parlare a suo figlio. La crisi di cui racconta questo romanzo non è solo quella di una coppia, forse è quella di una generazione, sicuramente la crisi del mondo che conosciamo - e del nostro pianeta. La magia di Tasmania, la forza con cui ci chiama a ogni pagina, è la rifrazione naturale fra ciò che accade fuori e dentro di noi. Cosí persino il fantasma della bomba atomica, che il protagonista studia e ricostruisce, diventa un esorcismo: l'apocalisse è in questo nostro dibattersi, e nei movimenti incontrollabili del cuore. Raccogliendo il testimone dei grandi scrittori scienziati del Novecento italiano, Paolo Giordano si spinge nei territori piú interessanti del romanzo europeo di questi anni, per approdare con felicità e leggerezza in un luogo tutto suo, dove poter giocare con i nascondimenti e la rivelazione di sé, scendere a patti con i propri demoni e attraversare la paura.
After losing the future he imagined for himself, a writer sets out in search of connection and purpose at a tipping point with climate change and global conflict, in this breathtaking novel from the Strega Prize–winning author of The Solitude of Prime Numbers. In late 2015, Paolo feels his life coming apart: While his wife, Lorenza, has decided to give up on pregnancy after years of trying, he clings to the dream of becoming a father, not just a father figure to Lorenza’s son. As their marriage strains, Paolo immerses himself in work, traveling to Paris to report on the UN Climate Change Conference in the wake of terrorist attacks that shook the world. His journalism dovetails with a book he hopes to write on the atomic bomb and its survivors, a growing obsession that will take him to cities across Europe and ultimately Japan. Along the way, Paolo interacts with a vibrant cast of characters, each struggling to find their own Tasmania, a safe haven in which to weather the coming crises—global warming, pandemics, authoritarian governments, and wars. He develops a friendship with a brilliant, opinionated physicist, who followed the scientific path Paolo had abandoned, and who will test Paolo’s loyalty and values. A stunning return to fiction after How Contagion Works, Paolo Giordano’s semi-autobiographical novel captures the fear, anxiety, wonder, and beauty of this time of uncertainty and upheaval, exploring how we can create and maintain relationships with other people when it feels increasingly difficult to connect.
Regional integration and territorial development in Latin America / Paolo Giordano, Francesco Lanzafame, and Jörg Meyer-Stamer -- Free trade agreements and asymmetries : proposals to foster gains from trade / Inés Bustillo and José Antonio Ocampo -- Comparative integration patterns : transatlantic lessons / Raúl Hinojosa-Ojeda -- Compensating asymmetries in regional integration agreements : lessons from Mercosur / Roberto Bouzas -- Differential regional competitiveness : opportunities and constraints / Ann Markusen and Clélio Campolina Diniz -- The regional challenge : European and Latin American experiences / Francisco Xabier Albistur Marin -- Globalization and local policy implementation : the challenge to practitioners / Greg Clark -- Local economic development : what makes makes it difficult, what makes it work / Jörg Meyer-Stamer.
Giocondo Schifani vive a Como da oltre venticinque anni, e l’unico indizio delle sue origini siciliane sono i capelli folti e nerissimi: non ha più l’accento marcato di quando, a soli quindici anni, vestito poco più che di stracci e con in tasca poche lire, aveva preso un treno e si era diretto al Nord in cerca di fortuna. Alla soglia dei cinquant’anni non può certo dire di essere diventato ricco, ma almeno non indossa più degli stracci, e andare al lavoro in giacca e cravatta è per lui un grande motivo di orgoglio. Il professore Giordano Allevi è un aspirante scrittore in difficoltà, un personaggio strano, quasi buffo nei suoi abiti fuori moda, che ha tarpato i propri sogni per creare la famiglia perfetta, salvo poi rendersi conto che la sua vita è un totale fallimento. Marco Bardelli si è cacciato in un grosso guaio, e decide di scomparire senza lasciare tracce: per farlo ha bisogno di trasferire del denaro, di un passaporto fasullo e di un posto dove scappare. Il destino farà incontrare i tre uomini in modo bizzarro e rocambolesco, e tutti loro saranno profondamente cambiati da quest’avventura, ottenendo finalmente ciò che desiderano, ma pagando anche un caro prezzo per gli errori commessi. Paolo Maggienga è nato a Verbania nel 1968. Abita in un piccolo paese alle porte di Como insieme alla moglie e a una figlia adolescente. Dopo aver frequentato il liceo classico “Gallio” di Como, ha conseguito la laurea in giurisprudenza presso l’Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore di Milano. Nel 2010 un suo corto è stato inserito nella raccolta “Le storie di Io Racconto”. Nello stesso anno, ha pubblicato il romanzo La verità di Alfredo (ed. Montag, ISBN 978-88-96793-30-5). Nel 2012 un racconto breve dal titolo In silenzio è apparso nel blog “Solferino 28 anni” del Corriere della Sera. Partecipando al concorso letterario “Twitteratura” del “Il Sole 24 Ore”, un suo scritto è stato pubblicato nell’edizione domenicale del quotidiano.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.