Catastrophe and Other Stories

Catastrophe and Other Stories

By Dino Buzzati

Pages

224

Rating

4.08

Year

1965

Description

These stories show how strange and unexpected events can creep into everyday life and draw ordinary people towards mystery, disquiet and, ultimately, catastrophe.

This volume brings together twenty of the best stories written by Dino Buzzati, author of the celebrated novel The Tartar Steppe and one of the most original voices in twentieth-century literature. The stories reveal the Italian master's taste for the bizarre and the humorous and his interest in the darker recesses of the human psyche.

From "The Collapse of the Baliverna," where a man is racked with guilt at the thought that he might have been responsible for the loss of many lives, to "The Epidemic," which describes the spread of a 'state influenza' contracted only by people who don't step into line with the government, and "Terror at the Scala," where the higher echelons of Milan society are gripped with the fear of an impending revolution—these stories trace how ordinary life can be invaded by the uncanny and lead, inexorably, to catastrophe.