cover image Last Summer in the City

Last Summer in the City

Gianfranco Calligarich, trans. from the Italian by Howard Curtis. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $25 (192p) ISBN 978-0-374-60015-0

Calligarich’s evocative English-language debut, originally published in Italy in 1973, follows the travails of a journalist in Rome. Leo Gazzara, 30, a self-described “pretentious snob... at the end of [his] tether,” recalls his struggles of the previous year. Leo moved to Rome because of its proximity to the sea, which he’s always loved, and for a job at a magazine that soon went out of business, leaving him to find a spot at a sports newspaper. He meets Arianna at a party and they start seeing each other, though she rebuffs his first declaration of love. In May, they go to the sea, where they trespass on private beaches and in vacant vacation villas. In June, Leo starts and abandons a job in TV, sleeps with an ex, and tries to ignore Arianna, who is dating someone else. As Leo and his friend Graziano Castelvecchio write a film script, Calligarich conjures Italy’s piazzas, parties, beaches, and bars with a mood reminiscent of A Movable Feast, and the friends’ project is halted by an affecting tragedy. While Leo’s unexamined poor treatment of others, especially Arianna, feels a bit dated, the feeling that Leo is alone in the world is poignantly conveyed. The scenery alone makes this worth a look. (Aug.)