few days ago I retreat to the Feltrinelli (still one of the best places to spend leisure time) and make an interesting discovery: a display with thirteen booklets looking intriguing. I can tell the cashier, and I was confirmed the small miracle, are free. I take them all and start reading. This is http://www.subwayedizioni.com/ initiative sponsored adequately emerging literature (and I hope not sold, at least not entirely ...) by Trenitalia and other brands eager to jump into the marketing of culture.
Bon, urging everyone to take these pamphlets and read them, here's my ranking of satisfaction.
1, place "South" by Andrea Massara Paolo (4), Verga taste but shudder at the thought that today in practice nothing has changed more than a century ago ...
2nd place "Beth" by Diego Tonini ( 9), I liked the brush quickly on this fancazzisti of 2000 that are constructed to measure an inferno and then threw in
3rd place "Ten Seconds" by Alberto Biondi (11) an essentialist view of the life cycle, very intense in its brevity, a little hope for young people today (not just of this country lives bimbominkia)
4th place tie "Cate-I" Matteo Cellini (8) and "Hound Dog" by Mauro Stay (2), the theme of discomfort in the boys faced a plausible
5th place tie "White Water Rafting" by Daniele de Sillo (6), "The Cavalry" by Matilde Quarter (5), pleasant to read but not strongly enough to leave a trace in
6th place tie "Regional Rail 20427" Paola Frigg (10), 'A bit of mist on Kilimanjaro "Zilio Diego (11) "Chiara Vanzetti" by Michele Turazza (3), uninteresting, with peaks of banality and heavy that in a book of just 10 pages to reflect on the quality of the story
7th place tie "Collection of Poems" AA.VV. (12), "A meter is still" by Alberto Paleari (1), with the best will possible, are unreadable
8th place "The flight of the spirit" of Stephen Ridulfo (13), I apologize for the brutality trial it is simply pathetic and arrogant. Happy reading!