In his later years, when he had lost nearly everything, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa would descend alone every morning into the roar of Palermo, clutching a small black bag containing a volume of Dickens, a notebook, and a blue biro pen. He would walk...
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09.13.19In Search of Lampedusa’s SicilyEssays
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09.06.19The Week AfterEssays
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08.15.19A Life in Four Languages and a WarEssays
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08.09.19Everything Is Under ControlEssays
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06.28.19Destroy All Monsters A-ZEssays
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06.14.19The HunterEssays
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04.26.19The AntiguansEssays
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04.26.19The Bones of LanguageEssays
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04.18.19BivalvesEssays
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04.18.19Seeds in the SoilEssays
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04.12.19Poetry and Philosophy RevisitedEssays
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04.12.19Fiddle MusicEssays
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02.21.19Death by DesireEssays
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02.15.19Stories from LifeEssays
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02.08.19Escaping StructureEssays
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12.21.18Past Becomes Present in Bringing Down the ColonelEssays
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11.14.18On the Challenges of Translating Seventeen by Hideo YokoyamaEssays
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11.09.18A Writer’s BusinessEssays
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09.27.18A Burning SoulEssays
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08.10.18My Mother’s GlovesEssays