

An edition of Senior Service (1999)
By Carlo Feltrinelli
Publish Date
2001
Publisher
Granta Books
Language
eng
Pages
431
Description:
Giangiacomo Feltrinelli was one of the most arresting and characterful international publishers of his generation, yet he died violently, as a member of an ultra-left group attempting to blow up an electricity pylon. Born into enormous wealth, he found himself equally attracted to great books and workers’ rights. Feltrinelli sponsored two great post-war novels – Boris Pasternak’s Dr Zhivago and The Leopard by Giuseppe di Lampedusa. He also published Saul Bellow, Che Guevara, Borges, Doris Lessing and Jack Kerouac in Italy. Despite the attentions of the KGB, Pasternak smuggled his manuscript out of the USSR to Feltrinelli, who then saw to it the the book was published worldwide, and the passionate editor’s intricate, censor-duping correspondence with the besieged writer is relayed in this memoir, in which Feltrinelli’s son Carlo looks back over his father’s life. (Source: [Granta](https://granta.com/contributor/carlo-feltrinelli/))
subjects: Biography, Feltrinelli editore, History, Intellectual life, Political activists, Politics and government, Publishers and publishing, Radicalism, Italy, politics and government, Italy, intellectual life, Revolutionaries
People: Giangiacomo Feltrinelli (1926-1972)
Places: Italy
Times: 1945-1976, 20th century