Cesare Pavese (1908-1950)was born in the countryside near Turin in northern Italy. His translations of Hermann Melville, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, andDaniel Defoe influenced his contemporaries, and the wider reading public. Pavese also worked at the Turin publisher Einaudi, where he went on to become the editorial director. He wrote poetry, essays and fiction, and kept diaries. In 1950, Pavese won the Strega Prize, Italy's most prestigious award for literature, for The Moon and the Bonfires. Later the same year, he committed suicide. Minna Zallman Proctor is the author of Landslide- True Stories (2017) and the editor of The Literary Review. Her essays have appeared in Bookforum, The Nation, and The New York Times Book Review, among other publications. Proctor's translation of Love in Vain, Selected Stories of Federigo Tozzi won the PEN Poggioli Prize. Her translations include Fleur Jaeggy's These Possible Lives, Natalia Ginzburg's Happiness, as Such, Bruno Arpaia's The Angel of History, and essays by Umberto Eco, and Pier Paolo Pasolini.
""Pavese, to me, is a constant source of inspiration."" — Jhumpa Lahiri ""There can be no excuse for not reading Pavese, one of the few essential novelists of the mid-twentieth century."" — Susan Sontag ""This is how writers in our ever-worsening world should write."" —Saul Bellow ""Pavese's nine short novels make up the most dense, dramatic and homogeneous narrative cycle of modern Italy, and are also . . . the richest in representing social ambiances, the human comedy, the chronicle of a society. But above all they are works of an extraordinary depth where one never stops finding new levels, new meanings . . . Each one of Pavese's novels revolves around a hidden theme, something unsaid which is the real thing he wants to say."" — Italo Calvino ""There is something about Pavese . . . that is insinuating, haunting and lyrically pervasive."" — The New York Times Book Review ""One of the word's great creative depressives."" — Tim Parks, The Daily Telegraph ""There is nothing with quite this passionate intensity and purity in American poetry . . . Hard Labor shows us Pavese at the outset of his own ultimately tragic career, writing poetry of courageous originality, intelligence, and power."" —Jonathan Galassi, The New York Times ""Cesare Pavese is one of those singular, disruptive poets, like Blake or Lawrence, who go against the grain—or the flow—of their culture, and for whom precedents would be as hard to find as successors . . . His marvellously peopled poems not only document the time—what Calvino called 'the Pavese era'—but also bear witness to a unique and restless intelligence."" —Jamie McKendric, The Guardian