Book 2

An Italian Village

by Paul Wright

Published 27 June 2014
Though Lake Como has always had a reputation for exclusivity, it is now one of Italy's most expensive places to live. But alongside the high-fliers are the everyday people, rich, poor and all levels in between. In this, the sequel to An Italian Home - Settling by Lake Como, expatriate English artist Paul Wright, a resident of Northern Italy for over 25 years pulls no punches to give us his take on his Italian neighbours, workmates and clients. From time to time, he touches base with a group of men, retired from the restaurant trade, who spend their days seated around the fountain in the piazza of his home village of Argegno, making their own running commentary on the world as it passes by.Paul travels outside village boundaries too, to the surrounding countryside, the Italian Riviera and the Italian countryside to work for all manner of clients, ranging from the reputable to the decidedly risky. After selling some of his trademark trompe l'oeil painted furniture to an American couple, he visits the USA to paints a mural for one of them at their home in New England and enjoys a break in New York City, where he discusses the art world.

Book 3

Cats Do Eat Spaghetti

by Paul Wright

Published 28 September 2017
When English artist Paul Wright and his wife moved to a new home beside Italy's Lake Como, their sleep was disturbed by the noise of a group of feral cats. Seeing the distressed condition that most were in, they decided to look after the animals' welfare. This led to them adopting a series of these and other rescue catsCats can take over people's lives. They certainly hold a very special place in the hearts of artist Paul Wright and his wife, Nicola. In 1991 they emigrated to Moltrasio, a village by Lake Como in northern Italy, but when they acquired a place of their own in the village's historic centre, their sleep was disturbed by the activities of a group of feral cats. Seeing the poor condition of these animals, Paul and Nicola began taking care of them, having them neutered to prevent any more kittens being born into such a hard life.When Paul rescues a tiny kitten that has been mauled by a dog, it becomes the first of many more strays the couple give homes to, but the intrusion of a rogue stray creates devastation when it infects some of the couple's cats with feline AIDS. But how do you name so many cats?
Paul's life-long love of soccer provides names for several, including Stevie G (after England soccer captain Steven Gerrard), and Anfield, after the home ground of Liverpool FC. Nicola, not being a soccer devotee names some - Roger, Kubanski and Pam after friends, work colleagues or neighbours, and chose Kalashnikov, the name of the Russian small arms engineer simply because she likes the sound of it!Illustrated throughout with Paul's own sketches of his cats, Cats Do Eat Spaghetti will be enjoyed by cat lovers and Italophiles alike.