Dacia Maraini in Viterbo at the National Etruscan Museum Rocca Albornoz

Dacia Maraini in Viterbo at the National Etruscan Museum Rocca Albornoz
Dacia Maraini in Viterbo at the National Etruscan Museum Rocca Albornoz

Miranda Bocci

NewTuscia – VITERBO – Tomorrow, July 3, Rosella Lisoni, president of the association La Torre di Tuscia, will talk with the famous writer Dacia Marini about her latest book “Vita mia” published by Rizzoli. Her memories in a Japanese concentration camp in 1943, where she was locked up with her family.

An intimate, poetic book, sweet and hard as the life that leads to Hell and brings back to light. A book that shows the immense love and deep respect for his parents, his lighthouse, his guide on the path of life.

A book that turns a personal story into a fresco of world history and the horrors of war seen through the eyes of a 7-year-old girl.
Heartbreaking, dramatic, heartbreaking stories that never leave room for despair, but on the contrary always keep hope alive.

“Music and poetry have the ability to thin out the reality of his pains,” says the writer.

The fluid, elegant style makes the book almost a novel, which from the initial pathos dissolves into a praise of culture, reading, knowledge that allows you to open your mind and break down boundaries.

Dacia Maraini, even in this narration of her private life, uses a compelling and fluid language that captivates the reader until he discovers an ending full of hope.

 
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