| Deledda, Grazia (1871-1936) |
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He gave me themes
to write about, and some of them turned out so well that he told me to
publish them in a newspaper. I was thirteen and I didn't know to whom
I should go to have my stories published. But I came across a fashion
magazine. I took the address and sent off a short story. It was immediately
published. Then I wrote my first novel, Fior di Sardegna (1892) [Flower
of Sardinia], which I sent to an editor in Rome. He published it, and
it was quite successful. But my first real success was Elias Portolu (1903),
which was first translated by the Revue des deux mondes, and then into
all of the European languages. I have written a great deal: L'edera (1912) [The Ivy], a play in three acts, with the collaboration of Camillo Antona-Traversi. In 1900 I took my
first trip. It was to Cagliari, the beautiful Sardinian capital. There
I met my husband. We later moved to Rome, where I am presently living.
I have also written some poems which have not been collected in a volume. Grazia Deledda (1875-1936) continued to write extensively after she received the Nobel Prize. La casa del poeta (1930) [The Poet's House] and Sole d'estate (1933) [Summer Sun], both collections of short stories, reflect her optimistic vision of life even during the most painful years of her incurable illness. Life remains beautiful and serene, unaltered by personal suffering; man and nature are reconciled in order to overcome physical and spiritual hardship. In many of her later works, Grazia Deledda combined the imaginary and the autobiographical; this blend is readily apparent in her novel, Il paese del vento (1931) [Land of the Wind]. In another novel, L'argine (1934) [The Barrier], the renunciation of worldly things, including love, mirrors the life of the author who, accepting self-sacrifice as a higher manner of living, is reconciled with God. The common trait of all her later writings is a constant faith in mankind and in God. Two of Grazia Deledda's novels were published posthumously: Cosima (1937) and Il cedro di Libano (1939) [The Cedar of Lebanon]. From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967. Grazia Deledda died in 1936. |