Book description
Told in a spare and powerful voice reminiscent of Hemingway and
Salinger, the three stories in Pietro Grossi's Fists explore the rite
of passage each of us faces in our youth and what it means to be a man
in our time. 'Fists', 'Horses' and 'The Monkey': three powerful
coming-of-age stories about boys confronting reality, and fighting to
stay alive in a man's world. In 'Fists', a teenage amateur boxer steps
into the ring for the first time, and finds himself in a face-off with
Life in all its muscular force; in 'Horses', two brothers embark on
their first forays into adulthood, each learning to play a man's game
in his own painful way; and in 'The Monkey', a young man realizes that
in order to stay sane and survive in this world, we have to sacrifice
our childhood dreams. Published by Pushkin Press, Howard Curtis's
translation of Fists won the 2010 Premio Campiello Europa, and was
shortlisted for the 2010 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. 'There is
more power and pathos in this short piece of spare, timeless prose
than in most densely-written novels ... All three tales are artful but
seemingly effortless, a quality shared by Howard Curtis's translation,
which feels elegantly natural' Â- Daniel Hahn, Independent The
greatest addition to Italian literature for a very long time' Â- Il
Dominicale 'His passion for Hemingway, Faulkner and Philip Roth can be
seen in this simple, precise and intense writing' Â- Il Giornale 'An
outstanding debut' Â- Giudizio Universale 'A perfect book' Â- Il Sole
24 Ore