AustLit
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
-
Homesickness
2018
single work
essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 403 2018; (p. 32)
— Review of The Fireflies of Autumn 2014 single work short story'Moreno Giovannoni’s collection of tales – populous and baggy, earthy and engrossing – offers not a history but the lifeblood, the living memory, of a small town in northern Italy called San Ginese, or more specifically a hamlet in its shadow called Villora. Villora is the point of departure and return for generations of Sanginesini, and the locus of the tales told.' (Introduction)
-
Homesickness
2018
single work
essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 403 2018; (p. 32)
— Review of The Fireflies of Autumn 2014 single work short story'Moreno Giovannoni’s collection of tales – populous and baggy, earthy and engrossing – offers not a history but the lifeblood, the living memory, of a small town in northern Italy called San Ginese, or more specifically a hamlet in its shadow called Villora. Villora is the point of departure and return for generations of Sanginesini, and the locus of the tales told.' (Introduction)
-
Homesickness
2018
single work
essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 403 2018; (p. 32)
— Review of The Fireflies of Autumn 2014 single work short story'Moreno Giovannoni’s collection of tales – populous and baggy, earthy and engrossing – offers not a history but the lifeblood, the living memory, of a small town in northern Italy called San Ginese, or more specifically a hamlet in its shadow called Villora. Villora is the point of departure and return for generations of Sanginesini, and the locus of the tales told.' (Introduction)
-
Homesickness
2018
single work
essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 403 2018; (p. 32)
— Review of The Fireflies of Autumn 2014 single work short story'Moreno Giovannoni’s collection of tales – populous and baggy, earthy and engrossing – offers not a history but the lifeblood, the living memory, of a small town in northern Italy called San Ginese, or more specifically a hamlet in its shadow called Villora. Villora is the point of departure and return for generations of Sanginesini, and the locus of the tales told.' (Introduction)