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Other people's trades / Primo Levi ; translated by Raymond Rosenthal.

By: Levi, Primo.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : Joseph, 1989Description: viii, 209 p. ; 22 cm.ISBN: 0718133315.Subject(s): Italian literatureDDC classification: 858.91208
Contents:
Other People's Trades -- My House -- Butterflies -- News from the sky -- Beetles -- A bottle of sunshine -- The moon and us -- Inventing an amimal --The leap of the flea -- Frogs on the Moon -- Love's Erector Set -- The Invisible World -- A long duel -- Grandfather's Store -- Why does one write? -- The skull and the orchid -- The best goods -- The scribe -- 'The most joyful creatures in the world' -- The mark of the chemist -- Eclipse of the Prophet -- Stable/Unstable -- The language of Chemists (I) -- The language of Chemists (II) -- The book of strange data -- Writing a novel -- Francois Rabelais -- The force of Amber -- The irritable chess-players -- Renzo's fist -- The fear of spiders -- Novels dictated by crickets -- Domum Servavit -- On obscure writing -- The children's International -- Going back to school -- Ex-chemist -- Signs on Stone -- Against Pain -- Thirty Hours on Castoro Sei -- The Hidden Player -- Ritual and laughter -- The need for fear -- To a young reader.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 858.91208 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00014676
Total holds: 0

Other People's Trades -- My House -- Butterflies -- News from the sky -- Beetles -- A bottle of sunshine -- The moon and us -- Inventing an amimal --The leap of the flea -- Frogs on the Moon -- Love's Erector Set -- The Invisible World -- A long duel -- Grandfather's Store -- Why does one write? -- The skull and the orchid -- The best goods -- The scribe -- 'The most joyful creatures in the world' -- The mark of the chemist -- Eclipse of the Prophet -- Stable/Unstable -- The language of Chemists (I) -- The language of Chemists (II) -- The book of strange data -- Writing a novel -- Francois Rabelais -- The force of Amber -- The irritable chess-players -- Renzo's fist -- The fear of spiders -- Novels dictated by crickets -- Domum Servavit -- On obscure writing -- The children's International -- Going back to school -- Ex-chemist -- Signs on Stone -- Against Pain -- Thirty Hours on Castoro Sei -- The Hidden Player -- Ritual and laughter -- The need for fear -- To a young reader.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Trained as a chemist in Italy, Levi was deported to Auschwitz in 1944. His experiences in the death camps and his subsequent careers as a chemist, author, and classicist are reflected in this volume of essays, selected before his death in 1987. They form a fitting tribute to Levi's spirit and love of life. Writing from his house in Turin, he artfully explores the realms of nature in ``Butterflies,'' ``Beetles,'' ``Inventing an Animal,'' ``The Leap of a Flea,'' and ``Frogs on the Moon.'' His reflections on civilization are featured in the varied pieces on unrequited love, using a word processor for the first time, Rabelais, psychological testing, playing games, returning to school at 60, and the need for fear. This is clear, precise writing filled with wonder and curiosity.-- Molly Abramowitz, Silver Spring, Md. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review

It is almost two years since Italian writer Primo Levi ( The Periodic Table ; Survival in Auschwitz ) committed suicide by throwing himself down the stairwell of the house in Turin where he had lived his entire life. Here, to the delight of his devotees, are 43 brief, elegant essays on subjects that aroused and amused him: birds, insects, frogs, parasites, pain, sidewalks, Rabelais, imaginary animals, the fear of snakes, qualities common to chess and poetry, children's games, using a word processor for the first time, going back to school at 60, uncertainty about the future, psychological exams, the language of chemists, obscure writing (German poets Trakl and Celan, both of whom committed suicide). These witty, charming pieces confirm Levi's position as one of the most gifted writers of our time. Reader's Subscription Book Club alternate. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Kirkus Book Review

In this posthumous collection of essays selected by the author (d. 1988) from pieces originally appearing in the Turin newspaper La Stampa, Levi treats subjects as diverse as writing, fear, insects, word processors, exams, and chess. A majority of the pieces concern nature, from microscopic creatures to the stars, and trace how our knowledge of specific natural phenomena has evolved throughout history. While Levi values the imagination, he underscores the importance of acquiring knowledge of the physical world and remains filled with wonder at the spectacle before us. The book's title is somewhat misleading, because many of the essays (like most of Levi's oeuvre) are autobiographical, derived from childhood memories, people he has known, and his experiences as a scientist and writer. Throughout, Levi manifests a considerable and exacting knowledge of a broad range of subjects and a painstaking effort to organize his material not by formulating facile analogies but by drawing fine distinctions. At times, he approaches the conceptual complexity and philosophical depth of Borges; elsewhere, his obsession with creating catalogues and taxonomies becomes tedious and of unclear motivation. Certain of the essays are long on concrete description and short on ideas; one longs for greater elaboration of themes often introduced only in the closing lines. in general, Levi's penchant for ""reading with a magnifying glass"" results in prose to be savored for its rare combination of patient observation, expansive imagination, and underlying humanity. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Primo Levi was born on July 31, 1919 in Turin, Italy. He pursued a career in chemistry, and spent the early years World War II as a research chemist in Milan. Upon the German invasion of northern Italy, Levi, an Italian Jew, joined an anti-fascist group and was captured and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. He was able to survive the camp, due in part to his value to the Nazis as a chemist.

After the war ended, Levi did chemistry work in a Turin paint factory while beginning his writing career. His first book, If This Is a Man (title later was changed to Survival in Auschwitz) was published in 1947 and its sequel, The Truce (later retitled The Reawakening) came out in 1958. These two books recount Levi's story of surviving concentration camp life.

Levi also published poetry, short stories, and novels, some under the pen name Damianos Malabaila. His 1985, largely autobiographical work, The Periodic Table, cemented his world fame. Awards in tribute to his writing included the Kenneth B. Smilen fiction award, presented by the Jewish Museum in New York.

Ironically, despite his surviving Auschwitz, Primo Levi appears to have died by suicide, in Turin on April 11, 1987.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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