The Abruzzo Trilogy: Fontamara Bread and Wine The Seed Beneath the Snow
Author: Ignazio Silone
Desc: The impoverished desolate mountain regions of the Abruzzo during Mussolini's reign provide the backdrop for the three greatest novels by Ignazio Silone one of the twentieth century's most important writers. In Fontamara Bread and Wine and The Seed Beneath the Snow - presented together for the first time in English to mark the centenary of the author's birth - Silone narrates the struggles of the cafoni the farmers and peasants of his native Abruzzo against poverty natural disasters and totalitarianism. The first novel in the series Fontamara is a political fable that portrays the bitter trials of the villagers of Pescina as they battle with landowners who have appropriated their only source of water. First published from his exile in Zurich in 1933 and banned in his own country the novel was translated into twenty languages and won Silone instant international literary fame. Silone's masterpiece Bread and Wine introduces the semi-autobiographical character Pietro Spina an anti-Fascist revolutionary who returns to his homeland after fifteen years in exile. He seeks refuge among the Abruzzo peasants by posing as the priest Don Paolo Spada. Pietro's story continues in The Seed Beneath the Snow Silone's personal favorite in the trilogy. Pietro Spina flees again and with the police in close pursuit is taken in by his grandmother Donna Maria Vincenza. Though comfortably settled in Italian bourgeois society she jeopardizes her own life in order to protect him.