Cesare Pavese Collection

1931-2006 1931-1950
13 titles (2 linear feet)
Call no.: RB 037
rotating decorative images from SCUA collections

Simultaneously prolific and tragic, Cesare Pavese was a major figure in 20th century Italian letters. Born in the Piedmont region in 1908 and educated in Turin, Pavese was drawn to English-language literature as a student, writing his thesis on Walt Whitman (1930). Nearly overnight, he became well known as a translator of modern American and British fiction, from Melville, Faulkner, and Steinbeck to James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, and at the same time, he began to publish his own creative work beginning with Lavorare stanca, a book of poetry, in 1936. Although sentenced to three years of internal exile for his anti-fascist sympathies (1938-1941), he continued to write, capped by the appearance of his first two novels in 1941 and 1942. The war's end saw Pavese blossom into an exceptionally creative period, however even as his renown grew, the effects of depression and a failed love affair with the American actress Constance Dowling led him to suicide in August 1950. Two months before he had been awarded the prestigious Strega Prize.



This collection of first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, donated by Lawrence G. Smith, includes first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, five of which are inscribed: three to Constance Dowling, one to his friend Leone Ginzburg (and later to Dowling), and the fifth to Doris and Harry. Smith also donated dozens of other volumes by and about Pavese to the Library's general collection.

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Background on Cesare Pavese


An image of:

Simultaneously prolific and tragic, Cesare Pavese was a major figure in 20th century Italian letters. Born in the Piedmont region in 1908 and educated in Turin, Pavese was drawn to English-language literature as a student, writing his thesis on Walt Whitman (1930). Nearly overnight, he became well known as a translator of modern American and British fiction, from Melville, Faulkner, and Steinbeck to James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, and at the same time, he began to publish his own creative work beginning with Lavorare stanca, a book of poetry, in 1936. Although sentenced to three years of internal exile for his anti-fascist sympathies (1938-1941), he continued to write, capped by the appearance of his first two novels in 1941 and 1942.

The war's end saw Pavese blossom into an exceptionally creative period, however even as his renown grew, the effects of depression and a failed love affair with the American actress Constance Dowling led him to suicide in August 1950. Two months before he had been awarded the prestigious Strega Prize.

Scope of collection

This collection of first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, donated by Lawrence G. Smith, includes first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, five of which are inscribed: three to Constance Dowling, one to his friend Leone Ginzburg (and later to Dowling), and the fifth to Doris and Harry. Smith also donated dozens of other volumes by and about Pavese to the Library's general collection.

Inventory

Almanacco della Medusa. Mondadori : Milan
1934

Includes photograph of Pavese.

Lewis, Sinclair: Il nostro signor Wrenn. Bempard : Firenze. Translated by Cesare Pavese
1931
Melville, Herman: Moby Dick, o la balena. Frassinelli : Turin
1932

Inscribed on free front endpaper: "Offro gratis a Leone Ginzburg / 10 - Giug - '32 / Cesare Pavese / Leone died / my only friend / won't you take his / place, Connie? / 1o April '50 / Rome Ces."

Pavese, Cesare: Il compagno. Einaudi : Turin
1949
2nd ed.

Inscribed on free front endpaper: "To Connie / alone like / many of us / from Cesare / Turin / 15-3-50."

Laid inside is a flier announcing publication of the book.

Pavese, Cesare: Interpretazione della poesia di Walt Whitman
1930

Photocopy of Pavese's tesi di laurea.

Pavese, Cesare: Interpretazione della poesia di Walt Whitman. Einaudi Plaquette fuori commercio, edition of 1,000 : Turin
2006

Uncut, no. 0839, with accompanying note from Roberto Cerati of Einaudi.

Pavese, Cesare: La luna e I falò. Einaudi : Turin
1950
1st ed.

Inscribed on free front endpaper: "To Doris and Harry / children of the gods / this tale of wistful / priest-ridden desperate / Italy, / from a conservative / C.P. / May 2nd 1950 / Turin."

Pavese, Cesare: Moon and the Bonfires. Signet paperback edition
1954
Pavese, Cesare: Paesi tuoi. Einaudi : Turin
1941
1st ed., in torn d.j.
Pavese, Cesare: Paesi tuoi. Einaudi : Turin
1941
2nd ed.
Pavese, Cesare: Paesi tuoi. Einaudi : Turin
1945
3rd ed., in torn d.j.

Inscribed on free front end paper: "To Connie, glowing, laughter, from Cesare, 15-3-50."

Pavese, Cesare: Political Prisoner. Mayflower Dell paperback
1956
Pavese, Cesare: Prima che il gallo canti. Einaudi : Turin
1949
1st edition

Inscribed on free front end paper: "To Connie / who understands, / from Cesare / Turin / 15-3-50."

Laid inside is a flier announcing publication of the book.

Administrative information

Access

The collection is open for research.

Provenance

Gift of Lawrence Smith, July 2018.

Digitized content

The inscribed volumes have been digitized and may be viewed online in SCUA's digital repository, Credo.

Processing Information

Processed by I. Eliot Wentworth, February 2019.

Language:

English

Copyright and Use (More information )

Cite as: Cesare Pavese Collection (RB 037). Special Collections and University Archives, University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries.

Search terms

Subjects

  • Employers' associations--Massachusetts
  • Massachusetts--Economic conditions--20th century
  • Montague Farm Community (Mass.)

Contributors

  • Pavese, Cesare [main entry]

Genres and formats

  • Newsletters

Link to similar SCUA collections