A lost literary classic, written in 1894, The Viceroys is one of the most acclaimed masterworks of Italian realism.
The novel follows three generations of the aristocratic Uzeda family as it struggles to hold on to power in the face of the cataclysmic changes rocking Sicily. As Garibaldi's triumphs move Italy toward unification, the Uzedas try every means to retain their position. De Roberto's satirical and mordant pen depicts a cast of upper-class schemers, headed by the old matriarch, Donna Teresa, and exemplified by her arrogant and totally unscrupulous son, Consalvo, who rises to political eminence through lip service, double-dealing, and hypocrisy. The Viceroys is a vast dramatic panorama: a new world fighting to shrug off the viciousness and iniquities of the old.
Federico De Roberto (1861-1927) was an Italian writer, who became well-known for his novel I Vicere (1894), translated as The Viceroys. He began his writing career as a journalist for national newspapers, where he met Giovanni Verga and Luigi Capuana. Verga introduced him into the literary circles of Milan. He wrote several books, and in 1894 his novel I Vicere was published.
Title: The Viceroys: A Novel
Author: Franco Moretti (Foreword), Federico De Roberto
ISBN: 9781784782566
Binding:
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication Date: 2016-01-19
Number of Pages: 640
Weight: 0.3675 kg
A skilfully crafted novel. De Roberto's technique is so confident, the Verso Classics timing and rhythm of the narration are so controlled and constant. -- Leonardo Sciascia, author of The Day of the Owl
A unique combination of naturalistic lucidity over the fate of impoverished aristocracies, and a Goya-like inventiveness in extracting from social disintegration a whole gallery of grotesques and monstrosities . a superb lesson in how coarse and rancid the collapse of a ruling class actually is. -- Franco Moretti
Undoubtedly a classic. -- Fredric Jameson
Verso Books has done a good deed in this timely republication of a remarkable novel. The capriciousness, the blind avarice and superstition, the arrogance and unearned license that the Uzedas embody cannot but resonate today. * Nation *