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Hardcover Italianissimo: The Quintessential Guide to What Italians Do Best Book

ISBN: 1892145545

ISBN13: 9781892145543

Italianissimo: The Quintessential Guide to What Italians Do Best

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

What is it about Italy that inspires passion, fascination, and utter devotion? This quirky guide to the Italian way of life, with its fifty witty mini-essays on iconic Italian subjects, will answer... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Related Subjects

Europe General Italy Travel Writing

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A tasty antipasto to sample the flavors of Italy

Just as a good antipasto plate offers a bite of cheese and a bite of olive, Italianissmo offers a quick nibble of Italian style, food and culture. And like a good appetizer, it leaves it readers hungry for more -- the good way. It's a light, quick read ranging from Italian language and gestures to ceramics and cinema. And, yes, pizza.

Beautiful -- book and excellent!

Lovely book, beautifully illustrated. A must for the traveller who wants magic and seeks beauty.

fabulous !!!

I love reading this book .. it is full of great info and wonderful little tidbits !!! recommend it highly !!!!

a little book to dream on --- armchair travel to Italy

I can remember traveling to Italy when the dollar was strong and the lira was downtrodden. Trading dollars for lira was quite the jolly experience --- at the currency exchange in Rome, you practically needed a shopping bag to carry a few hundred dollars in Italian money. Now the Ferragamo is on the other foot. The Euro reigns supreme, and here in New York, the best restaurants and shops post their prices in dollars and Euros, for the convenience of our currency-advantaged foreign guests. For the foreseeable future, Americans --- well, my friends and I, anyway --- might as well not have passports. But if you think I'm going to say that my expedition to Arthur Avenue in the Bronx is as satisfying as dinner in the Roman ghetto, dream on. I have only to close my eyes to smell the wood smoke of a Tuscan evening, or hear the madness of traffic in Rome, or see a cathedral ceiling. And then, when I open my eyes, I can do some smart importing of Italian products and culture --- I can splurge on artisanal foods from Gustiamo.com, watch movies like The Conformist, read about Elizabeth Gilbert's hunt for the perfect pizza in Eat, Pray, Love. And, with the help of Italianissimo: The Quintessential Guide to What Italians Do Best, I can do some delightful armchair traveling. It doesn't take much to get me dreaming, so I don't want a thick tome. This nice square book, with glorious photos and great design, is itself very Italian --- and, like a serving of pasta at Dal Bolognese in Rome, just enough to satisfy. The book is a list of 50 categories. Each gets a two-page spread: smart text, full-page photo. Like a luxury magazine, only on a single subject --- the glory of the Italian spirit. Like.... Balsamic Vinegar --- in the fine print, there's a description of a vinegar-inspired restaurant in Modena with only four tables. Il Caffé --- always good to be reminded that Italians never order cappuccino after dinner. "It impedes the digestion." Espresso only, please! (And how nice that the authors agree that Sant'Eustachio coffee is indeed the best. Il Capodanno --- why red underwear is a hot item in December. (It wards off the evil eye.) I Gesti Italiani --- a guide to hand gestures. La Gondola --- did you know it takes 500 hours and 7 types of wood to make one? And that they're custom-built to work with the individual gondolier's weight? La Mezzaluna --- the half-moon kitchen utensil. Safer than a knife and more efficient. I'm ordering a mezzaluna now. Pizza --- Why was the original called marinara? In honor of hungry fishermen, who craved it when they came ashore. But let me serve one large helping. Here's the entire entry for a beloved car. I knew nothing: LA CINQUECENTO (The Fiat 500) What is the subject of a love song, a character in an animated film, and has doors that make men weep? The Fiat 500, of course. In the 1930s, while England had the Morris 8 and Germany the Volkswagen, Mussolini's Italy was experiencing vehicle envy. To address the pr
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