Chelmsford Public Library

Renato!, a novel, Eugene Mirabelli ; with an introduction by Douglas Glover

Label
Renato!, a novel, Eugene Mirabelli ; with an introduction by Douglas Glover
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
Renato!
Oclc number
1176316425
Responsibility statement
Eugene Mirabelli ; with an introduction by Douglas Glover
Sub title
a novel
Summary
"Renato! is the sweeping "autobiography" of Renato Stillamare, a talented yet struggling artist in Boston. Renato is, in addition, an uncommonly gifted story-teller as he first sets out relating the outlandish family legends that lead to his eventual discovery and adoption as a foundling. Renato's early life follows, including multiple misadventures that lead to his marriage to Alba Quick. But the heart of Renato! is the eventful summer of 2000, Renato's seventieth year. Having retired from teaching, he retreats to his Boston studio where he is possessied by an unquenchable ambition: to have his paintings exhibited by a Newbury Street gallery despite his work being out of favor for 25 years. He is furiously painting painting painting when his world is suddenly turned upside down by the appearance on his doorstep of a young homeless woman and her child. A screwball comedy ensues that Preston Sturges would have been the obvious choice of directors to film. Until life turns tragic. Renato! is a marriage of story-telling forms, and is imbued with matters of love, sex, food, philosophy, religion, and the intricacies of family attachments. The larger canvas stretches from 1860 to the present, and from Sicily to Massachusetts. The character Renato is creative, noble, jealous, generous, foolish, compassionate, self-deprecating, impulsive, selfish, and witty. His eye for detail is acute and revealing; his metaphors are apt and often hilarious; but his heart is vulnerable and his suffering is real. Renato! is a novel about having a passion for life and encountering its inevitable vicissitudes. It was written across three decades and its parts were released in three volumes before its revision and assembly into this single masterwork. In his introduction, novelist and critic Douglas Glover remarks "Mirabelli has reinvented the peculiarly Italian, extravagantly melodramatic and often comic vision-the opera-in the novel form""--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
The goddess in love with a horse -- Renato, the painter -- After Alba
Classification
Content
resource.writerofintroduction
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