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・ Roberto Palacios
・ Roberto Palazuelos
・ Roberto Paliska
・ Roberto Pangaro
・ Roberto Pannunzi
・ Roberto Parada
・ Roberto Parga
・ Roberto Parra
・ Roberto Parra Sandoval
・ Roberto Pasca
・ Roberto Passarin
・ Roberto Patino
・ Roberto Pavoni
・ Roberto Payró
・ Roberto Payán
Roberto Pazzi
・ Roberto Peccei
・ Roberto Pedraza Martínez
・ Roberto Pelizzola
・ Roberto Penna
・ Roberto Peper
・ Roberto Peragón
・ Roberto Perera
・ Roberto Pereyra
・ Roberto Perfumo
・ Roberto Perpignani
・ Roberto Petagine
・ Roberto Petito
・ Roberto Pettinato
・ Roberto Pezzetta


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Roberto Pazzi : ウィキペディア英語版
Roberto Pazzi

Roberto Pazzi (born 1946, in Ameglia, Italy) is an Italian novelist and poet. His works have been translated into twentysix languages.

Pazzi graduated in classics in Bologna with a thesis on Luciano Anceschi and aesthetics on the poetry of Umberto Saba. He taught cultural anthropology and the philosophy of history and sociology of art and literature in high school and a college in Ferrara.
His first poems appeared in a poetry anthology in the magazine ''Arte e poesia'' in 1970.
His collections of verse are: ''L'esperienza anteriore'' (I dispari, 1973), ''Versi occidentali'' (Rebellato 1976), ''Il re, le parole'' (Lacaita, 1980), ''Calma di vento'' (Garzanti, 1987), ''Il filo delle bugie'' (Corbo, 1994), ''La gravità dei corpi (Palomar, 1998) e ''Talismani'' (Marietti 2003).
He published his first novel ''Cercando l'Imperatore'' in 1985. The novel was translated into 12 languages and won the Premio Bergamo. He followed ''Cercando l'Imperatore'' with various historic novels: ''La principessa e il drago'' (Garzanti 1986), ''La malattia del tempo'' (Marietti 1987, Garzanti 1991), ''Vangelo di Giuda'' (Garzanti 1989) and ''La stanza sull'acqua'' (Garzanti 1991, Bompiani 2012).
With ''Le città del dottor Malaguti'' (Garzanti 1993) he moved his novels to a contemporary setting in the town where the book's narrator lives, Ferrara. After that, he wrote ''Incerti di viaggio'' (Longanesi 1996, premio Selezione Campiello, superpremio Penne-Mosca 1996), ''Domani sarò re'' (Longanesi 1997), ''La città volante'' (Baldini & Castoldi 1999, finalist at Premio Strega, introduced by Dario Fo and Sebastiano Vassalli, reprinted by Frassinelli ), ''Conclave'' (Frassinelli 2001, Barbera 2012, premio Scanno, premio Comisso, Superpremio Flaiano, premio Stresa, premio Zerilli Marimò of New York University, premio Rapolano Terme, finalist at premio Viareggio, finalist at premio Bigiaretti, translated in 15 countries, among these Germany, USA, France, and Spain), ''L'erede'' (Frassinelli 2002, finalist at premio Viareggio, premio Maria Cristina, translated in German), ''Il signore degli occhi'' (Frassinelli 2004, premio Cala di Volpe), ''L'ombra del padre'' (Frassinelli 2005, translated in French, premio Elsa Morante Isola di Procida), ''Qualcuno mi insegue'' (Frassinelli 2007), ''Le forbici di Solingen'' (Corbo 2007), ''Dopo primavera'' (Frassinelli, 2008), and ''Mi spiacerà morire per non vederti più'' (Corbo 2010).
Today, after twelve years of exclusive partnership with ''Corriere della Sera'', Pazzi writes for several newspapers including ''il Resto del Carlino'', ''La Nazione'', ''Il Giorno'' and ''The New York Times''.
Pazzi lives in Ferrara, where he teaches at the university, holds annual creative writing courses and, for Corbo editore, he leads the series of narrative "L'Isola Bianca". He is an active lecturer in the various countries of the world where his work has spread.
==Works==


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