In the Gathering Woods

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4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$23.00  $21.39
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
256
Dimensions
6.05 X 8.26 X 0.67 inches | 0.84 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822957829
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Adria Bernardi is a writer and translator whose publications include an oral history, a collection of essays, a collection of short stories, and two novels. Her translations from the Italian include the prose of Gianni Celati and the poetry of Tonino Guerra and Raffaello Baldini. She has been awarded the 1999 Bakeless Prize for Fiction, the 2000 Drue Heinz Literature Prize, and the 2007 Raiziss/DePalchi Translation Award. She was awarded the 2021 FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize for her novel, Benefit Street, which will be published by The University of Alabama Press in 2022.
Reviews
Whether a small boy picking mushrooms in Italy, a wet nurse, an Illinois girl in the 60s learning Latin in Catholic school--Adria Bernardi's characters are in love with the mysteries and quirks and strange inevitability of language, and its power to shape memory. Bernardi's stories, which range from Chicago to Italy, have both strength and a lovely delicacy, and are deeply rooted in her own fascination with language.-- "Jane Hamilton"
This impressive collection is distinguished by its graceful and engaging language as well as its impressive and varied cast of characters. The stories, which loosely follow a family from Italy during the 1500s to modern-day Chicago, take on the energy of a novel. In the Gathering Woods is even more delightful to read the second time around.-- "Tony Ardizzone"
Tony Ardizzone suggests that these stories 'loosely trace a family from Italy during the 1500s to modern day Chicago, ' and that is in some sense true, but also in some sense misleading. . . . I would describe the connective thread between the narratives as DNA--and I'm not making a metaphor. The individuals in the short narratives are carrying specific DNA through time, so that the work is not about family in the . . . novel sense with which we are so familiar, but rather about human survival through time itself, with or without the people having a conscious sense of connectedness to each other. . . . One might simply have to read [it] to understand.-- "Frank Conroy, judge"
Adria Bernardi's new story collection is a wonderfully accomplished work of fiction, telling the stories of such diverse characters as a a 16th-century Apennine shepherd, a wet nurse suffering from a sort of agoraphobia, a pair of Italian mushroom hunters and a workaholic neurologist from Chicago. . . The stories in the collection are so rich in detail, so rich in voice and so rich in history that they often read as sketches of much longer works. . . . These stories are lyrical and lovely. Thes narratives cohere to form an impressive collection.-- "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
It is easy to see how this collection earned the prestigious Drue Heinz Literature Prize for In the Gathering Woods is a literary monument of Bernardi's love for language and a joy to read.-- "Italianita"
Here at last is fiction worthy of award. . . . With crystalline prose, Bernardi illuminates the gentle fatalism and inextricable sadness of Italian families, here and across the sea. . . . Haunting, with a taste in the words like bitter cherries.-- "Booklist"
Folkloric at first, and full of Italian phrases (translated), Bernardi's somber stories have the outlines of a grand family saga but settle for the minor pleasures of competent ethnic fiction.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Craft and imagination distinguish this short story cycle about a long bloodline originating in a remote Italian mountain village. ...Ranging fluidly over 400 years in the Bartolai family history, writer and translator Adria Bernardi culls a handful introspective types from that lineage and lets them think out loud. These stories flower forth from the family tree with the arresting color of a late -season bloom. Her distincive teqnique, both panaramic and pointillist, has a unique power to make visable minor ancesteral inheirtiances that time tends to rub out.-- "ChicagoTribune"
"Bernardi's remarkable recreation of a slice of Titian's life gives the reader asense of having visited the studio of the great Renaissance Italian artist. It is an aspect of Bernardi's style in these stories to suggest more than she describes about the details of her settings and characters".-- "LiItalo-Americano"
It is easy to see how this short story collection earned the prestigious Drue Heinz Literature Prize, for "In the Gathering Woods" is a literary monument of Bernardi's love for language and a joy to read.-- "Italianita"