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Racconti neri book cover
Racconti neri
2005
First Published
3.80
Average Rating
466
Number of Pages
A parere unanime Giorgio Scerbanenco ?? considerato il capostipite del noir all'italiana. Prima di lui il genere in pratica non esisteva, e da anni ?? il modello per molti scrittori italiani di questo genere. Il volume raccoglie una trentina tra i migliori racconti di Scerbanenco, scritti tra il 1959 e la morte, avvenuta nel 1969. "Storie - scrive Carlo Lucarelli -, storie vere ed eccezionali anche se minime, racconti di poche righe ma che per densit?? potrebbero essere le righe centrali di un romanzo di centinaia di pagine. Storie da raccontare, come va fatto senza tante scuse."
Avg Rating
3.80
Number of Ratings
84
5 STARS
23%
4 STARS
46%
3 STARS
21%
2 STARS
7%
1 STARS
2%
goodreads

Author

Giorgio Scerbanenco
Giorgio Scerbanenco
Author · 23 books

Vladimir Giorgio Šerbanenko was an Italian journalist and writer of Ukranian origin. He was born in Kiev, in what was then the Russian Empire, on 28 July 1911. At an early age, his family immigrated to Rome (Scerbanenco's father was Ukrainian, his mother was Italian), and then he moved to Milan when he was 18 years old. He found work as a freelance writer for many Italian magazines, chief among them Anna Bella before becoming a novelist. His first fiction books were detective novels set in USA and clearly inspired by the works of Edgar Wallace and S.S. Van Dine signed with an English-sounding pen name. While Scerbanenco wrote in several genres, he is famous in Italy for his crime and detective novels, many of which have been dramatized in Italian film and television [1]. These include the series of novels with main character Duca Lamberti, a physician struck off the register for having performed a euthanasia, and turned detective (Venere privata - A Private Venus, 1966; Traditori di tutti - Betrayers of All, 1966; I ragazzi del massacro - The Boys of the Massacre, 1968; I milanesi ammazzano al sabato - The Milanese kill on Saturday, 1969), as well as Sei giorni di preavviso (Six Days of Notice), his first novel. He died of a heart attack in Milan on 27 October 1969. As well as in Milan, the writer lived for a long period in Lignano Sabbiadoro, a town on the Adriatic Sea in Friuli-Venezia Giulia. The town holds his archive.

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