Heart Conditions

Heart Conditions

by Matilde Serao
Heart Conditions

Heart Conditions

by Matilde Serao

eBook

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Overview

In this sparkling collection of short stories, Matilde Serao writes of love and romance as if she were Barbara Cartland's older, crankier -- and often much funnier -- sister. These stories turn many of the standard romantic clichés upside down with sometimes tragic, sometimes comic, but always unexpected, results. After an evening with Matilde Serao, you will never look at romance quite the same way!
Matilde Serao was a giant of early 20th century Italian literature as well as a pioneer. She was a journalist -- she ran her own newspaper for several years -- and an accomplished novelist and short story writer who was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature six times.

Serao was also a genuine character. Edith Wharton described her like this, "With her strident dress and intonation, she seemed an incongruous figure in that drawing-room where everything was in half-shades and semi-tones, but when she began to speak we had found our master."

These short stories, while immensely popular in Italy and France for over a hundred years, appear here in English for the very first time.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940162715474
Publisher: Kazabo Publishing
Publication date: 02/27/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Matilde Serao was a giant of early 20th century Italian literature as well as a pioneer. She was born in Greece in 1856 to an Italian father and a Greek mother. She devoted herself to a life of constant, disciplined writing. She ran her own newspaper ("Il Giorno") from 1904 until her death in 1927. She was also very prolific in literature, and was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature on six occasions.
Through her literary efforts, Serao was able to carve a place for herself in disciplines largely dominated by men. In Italy, she became known for her eccentricity and determination, capable of establishing her authority anywhere. It was in Paris, in one of the famous literary salons of the time, that she met Edith Wharton, who was intrigued by the Neapolitan’s acute intelligence and eccentric appearance. Wrote Wharton, “With her strident dress and intonation, she seemed an incongruous figure in that drawing-room where everything was in half-shades and semi-tones, but when she began to speak we had found our master… Her training as a journalist had given her a rough-and-ready knowledge of life, and an experience of public affairs, totally lacking in the drawing-room Corinnes whom she outrivaled in wit and eloquence.”
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