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Hard Labor by Cesare Pavese

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Hard Labor

Cesare Pavese, William Arrowsmith, Ted Olson

New York Review Books · Paperback · June 17, 2025

Reading lane: Italian Literary Collections

A landmark translation of passionate, fiercely intelligent poetry about coming of age by one of the most influential Italian writers of the twentieth century.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers interested in poetryGood for fans of PoetryGood for readers who enjoy Italian Literary Collections and Italian Literary Criticism.

Book Details

Authors
Cesare Pavese, William Arrowsmith, Ted Olson
Publisher
New York Review Books
Published
June 17, 2025
Format
Paperback
Theme
Italian Literary Collections · Italian Literary Criticism
Reading lane
Italian Literary Collections

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Nature Poetry

  • Place Poetry

About This Book

A landmark translation of passionate, fiercely intelligent poetry about coming of age by one of the most influential Italian writers of the twentieth century. In the spring of 1935, the young Cesare Pavese was sentenced, for "antifascist activities," to three years of detention in a small seaside village in Calabria. Far away from his familiar life in the city of Turin and forced to rely on his own resources, he began to write poems of tremendous power, in terse lines and un...

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A landmark translation of passionate, fiercely intelligent poetry about coming of age by one of the most influential Italian writers of the twentieth century. In the spring of 1935, the young Cesare Pavese was sentenced, for "antifascist activities," to three years of detention in a small seaside village in Calabria. Far away from his familiar life in the city of Turin and forced to rely on his own resources, he began to write poems of tremendous power, in terse lines and unsentimental language, giving voice to country people and hard country lives untainted by the propaganda of Fascism. "When I found my friends, I found my real home— / land so worthless a man's got a perfect right / to do absolutely nothing." Though Pavese is now most famous for his fiction, he was a poet first of all, and Hard Labor was the work for which he hoped to be remembered. It is a book, he once said, "that might have saved a generation." William Arrowsmith's translations—with their strong lines and bold American diction—marvelously convey the spirit and complex vitality of the original.

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