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La Saga de Arturo Bandini

Esta saga narra el proceso de maduración y la búsqueda de identidad de un joven de ascendencia italiana que navega por la vida en América. La serie profundiza en las complejas dinámicas familiares, los choques culturales y los albores del primer amor en un entorno de circunstancias humildes. El autor captura magistralmente la agitación emocional y los deseos del protagonista adolescente, cuya vida se entrelaza con las luchas de sus padres y sus propias experiencias con el amor y la decepción. Ofrece una conmovedora representación de la adolescencia, enfatizando los lazos familiares y el patrimonio cultural.

The Road to Los Angeles
Wait until spring, Bandini
Dreams from Bunker Hill
The Bandini Quartet
Ask the Dust

Orden recomendado de lectura

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    I had a lot of jobs in Los Angeles Harbor because our family was poor and my father was dead. My first job was ditchdigging a short time after I graduated from high school. Every night I couldn’t sleep from the pain in my back. We were digging an excavation in an empty lot, there wasn’t any shade, the sun came straight from a cloudless sky, and I was down in that hole digging with two huskies who dug with a love for it, always laughing and telling jokes, laughing and smoking bitter tobacco.

    The Road to Los Angeles
  3. 3

    Ask the Dust

    • 165 páginas
    • 6 horas de lectura
    4,2(24935)Añadir reseña

    Ask the Dust is a virtuoso performance by an influential master of the twentieth-century American novel. It is the story of Arturo Bandini, a young writer in 1930s Los Angeles who falls hard for the elusive, mocking, unstable Camilla Lopez, a Mexican waitress. Struggling to survive, he perseveres until, at last, his first novel is published. But the bright light of success is extinguished when Camilla has a nervous breakdown and disappears . . . and Bandini forever rejects the writer's life he fought so hard to attain.

    Ask the Dust
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    Dreams from Bunker Hill

    • 152 páginas
    • 6 horas de lectura

    My first collision with fame was hardly memorable. I was a busboy at Marx's Deli. The year was 1934. The place was Third and Hill, Los Angeles. I was twenty-one years old, living in a world bounded on the west by Bunker Hill, on the east by Los Angeles Street, on the south by Pershing Square, and on the north by Civic Center. I was a busboy nonpareil, with great verve and style for the profession, and though I was dreadfully underpaid (one dollar a day plus meals) I attracted considerable attention as I whirled from table to table, balancing a tray on one hand, and eliciting smiles from my customers. I had something else beside a waiter's skill to offer my patrons, for I was also a writer.

    Dreams from Bunker Hill
  • The Bandini Quartet

    • 749 páginas
    • 27 horas de lectura

    One of the great outsider figures of twentieth-century literature, John Fante possessed a style of deceptive simplicity, full of emotional immediacy and tremendous psychological point. Among the novels, short stories and screenplays that comprised his career, Fante's crowning accomplishments were, for many, his four stories about a certain uncomplicated character from the hills of Abruzzi. Collected together in one volume for the first time, The Bandini Quartet tells of Arturo Bandini, Fante's fictional alter ego, an impoverished young Italian-American who, armed with only a Jesuit high school education and the insane desire to write novels, escapes his suffocating home in Colorado to seek glory in a Depression-era Los Angeles. This edition also includes the first-ever UK publication of Dreams From Bunker Hill, the brilliant and final novel which a blind and wheelchair-bound Fante, nearing his death bed, dictated to his wife Joyce.

    The Bandini Quartet