Italy Books
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sally not the sally in dick & janeReview Date: 2008-03-16
A Life Fully LivedReview Date: 2008-03-13
Cynthia Hallanger
www.challangercoaching.com


Italy's best kept secret.Review Date: 2002-12-12
Molto bene.
Grazie tanto Gail, Kevin, Simon and Robert!
Pack your bags, your camera, and your appetite!Review Date: 2002-05-30
This book may just be the best combination touring/cooking/picture-taking guide to Italy that you will find. And hats off to the book designer who made it into a wonderful travel scrapbook. The design alone is the definitive guide to producing your own travel journal/diary/photo album. You will want to make a book like this for your own journey(s).
For [the price], this is as close as you can get to being in Italy. In fact, if you play some of the Cieli di Toscana CD by Andrea Bocelli, drink a nice dry Italian red wine, and eat a little Bruschetti as you browse the pages of this coffee table book, you may be magically transported.
Salute!

Used price: $4.56

Saving Rome is great.Review Date: 2006-05-13
I Love This BookReview Date: 2006-03-13

Used price: $3.25

An engaging account of a ridiculous archaeological fraudReview Date: 2005-08-14
An Ancient and Amusing ForgeryReview Date: 2005-07-18
In November 1634, Curzio Inghirami, nineteen years old, near his family's villa Scornello found a scarith, a capsule of mud containing peculiar documents written on paper in Latin and in Etruscan, the ancient language of the region that had yet to be deciphered. He eventually found over 200 of these, purporting to be documents from 64 BCE, which among other things, put a Tuscan spin on the Catline revolt against Rome, showed that Noah had founded the nearby ancient city of Volterra, and predicted the arrival of the Messiah. Curzio's book _Ethruscarum Antiquitatum Fragmenta_ appeared in 1636. Curzio's family ensured that the book was simply gorgeous, full of woodcuts and copperplate engravings on good quality paper. The book was designed to convince anyone who merely glimpsed at it of the truth of its contents. Academics based in Rome who descended upon it showed the forgery to be obvious. The foremost objection was that the scarith were written on paper, while Etruscans knew nothing about paper; they wrote on linen cloth. (Long after the controversy had died away, a commercial watermark was even found on them.) Curzio had indeed arranged the forgery, but it was so strongly criticized and defended, he could not back down. The battle was on a higher plane as well. It was only a year before the scarith were discovered that Galileo, a Tuscan, had been forced to recant his model of the universe with the sun at the center. The Pope was eager to put down this new bid for Tuscan pride, and Florence was just as eager to regain the intellectual reputation besmirched by Galileo's conviction and house arrest.
Rowland thinks that Curzio was participating in the practical joke, such an art form in Tuscany that it has its own name, beffa. His original scarith might be seen as preposterous parodies, but he did have a genuine interest in Etruscan objects and culture, an interest promoted by patriotism for his homeland. When his fellow citizens and family took up his cause, perhaps there was no way that he could back down. He was destined for law school by his family, but didn't want to go. He wanted to be a historian, but by making up history, he could avoid all that laborious studying that historians have to do. His joke proved to be exceedingly long-lasting. In 1985, during the Italian "Year of the Etruscans," thieves broke into the Palazzo Inghirami and stole the scarith. They must have thought the scarith were real, but in doing so, they were only members of a long line.

Used price: $55.98

superbReview Date: 2007-12-30
In love with VerrochioReview Date: 2004-01-09

Rarely have I read a story such as this!Review Date: 2003-10-13
Sensual, witty and a great book!!Review Date: 2003-09-04

Used price: $16.87

Secrets of RomeReview Date: 2008-03-26
It is not a guide book with an in depth narration of several sites and personages. A must read!
The Secrets of Rome Love & Death in the Eternal CityReview Date: 2008-02-08
Used price: $5.19

So many memoriesReview Date: 2005-03-22
You'll Want to Stay in Sant'AngeloReview Date: 2005-01-26

Secrets of Vesuvius is an outstanding bookReview Date: 2000-02-12
Teach history and good writing simultaneously with Dr. BiselReview Date: 1999-03-18
The book opens with Dr. Bisel introducing herself as "The bone lady", a physical anthropologist who is offered the rare chance to study Roman skeletons. The Romans usually cremated their dead.
In the next section of the book, Dr. Bisel presents the fictional story of a young slave girl, Petronia. She is struggling to survive a cruel mistress and the volcanic fire beneath their homes. As Petronia's story enfolds, we meet the individuals who are later revealed as the skeletons discovered in sealed boat tunnels.
The fictional narrative, historical information, and scientific revelations are interspersed throughout the text. The pace is effective, quick, yet absorbing.
Because of beautifully written descriptions, strong images, and well-crafted characters, we quickly care about individuals in their last moments before and during the eruption. At the same time, we learn about the artifacts and daily life of Ancient Rome as well as the effects of the eruption on the sealed city.
I use this in my classroom with 6th graders. My primary lesson is "Good non-fiction uses the same writing techniques as good fiction." I hope they will never accept non-fiction as routinely boring after they have finished this book.
Dr. Bisel deserves a "Golden Pen Award" for this excellent work.

Used price: $14.00

I loved every single poem I read!Review Date: 2003-12-02
A dozen great female poets of Italy's historyReview Date: 2002-09-07
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