Gesualdo Bufalino
Gesualdo Bufalino was born in Comiso, Sicily, in 1920. He studied literature at Catania and Palermo, and was a teacher by profession, turning author only after his retirement in 1976. He started The Plague-spreader's Tale , his first novel, in 1950, but it was only in 1981, after he had taken the discarded manuscript out of the drawer at the prompting of his fellow-Sicilian writer Leonardo Sciascia and reworked it, that it was published; it won the Campiello Prize. The novel is to a great...See more
Gesualdo Bufalino was born in Comiso, Sicily, in 1920. He studied literature at Catania and Palermo, and was a teacher by profession, turning author only after his retirement in 1976. He started The Plague-spreader's Tale , his first novel, in 1950, but it was only in 1981, after he had taken the discarded manuscript out of the drawer at the prompting of his fellow-Sicilian writer Leonardo Sciascia and reworked it, that it was published; it won the Campiello Prize. The novel is to a great extent based on his own experience: in it the narrator looks back over twenty-five years to November 1946 when he left the Sanatorium, healed. This novel was soon followed by Blind Argus, then by Night's Lies, which won the prestigious Strega prize. Both novels are published by Harvill, as also a collection of short stories, The Keeper of Ruins. Bufalino died in 1996, leaving a last novel, Thomas and the Blind Photographer, which is also to be published by Harvill. Patrick Creagh won the John Florio Prize for his translation of Blind Argus. In addition to his translation of Night's Lies and The Keeper of Ruins, he has brought to an English-language readership the work of many leading Italian writers, including Brancati, Vassalli, Magris, Morazzoni, Satta, Ortese and Tabucchi. He is also a considerable poet in his own right. See less