Pinocchio (illustrated) (New York Review Children's Collection)

by Carlo Collodi

Umberto Eco (Introduction), Fulvio Testa (Illustrator), Professor of Semiotics Umberto Eco (Introduction), and Geoffrey Brock (Translator)

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Book cover for Pinocchio (illustrated)

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Though one of the best-known books in the world, Pinocchio at the same time remains unknown—linked in many minds to the Walt Disney movie that bears little relation to Carlo Collodi’s splendid original. That story is of course about a puppet who, after many trials, succeeds in becoming a “real boy.” Yet it is hardly a sentimental or morally improving tale. To the contrary, Pinocchio is one of the great subversives of the written page, a madcap genius hurtled along at the pleasure and mercy of his desires, a renegade who in many ways resembles his near contemporary Huck Finn.
 
Pinocchio the novel, no less than Pinocchio the character, is one of the great inventions of modern literature. A sublime anomaly, the book merges the traditions of the picaresque, of street theater, and of folk and fairy tales into a work that is at once adventure, satire, and a powerful enchantment that anticipates surrealism and magical realism. Thronged with memorable characters and composed with the fluid but inevitable logic of a dream, Pinocchio is an endlessly fascinating work that is essential equipment for life.
 
Geoffrey Brock’s acclaimed new translation is reissued in an edition for children with over fifty full-page watercolors by Fulvio Testa.
  • ISBN10 1590175883
  • ISBN13 9781590175880
  • Publish Date 9 October 2012
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint New York Review of Books