Giovanni ArpinoGiovanni Arpino (27 January 1927 – 10 December 1987) was an Italian writer and journalist. LifeBorn in Pula, Croatia to Piedmontese parents, Arpino moved to Bra in the Province of Cuneo. Here he married Caterina Brero before moving to Turin, where he remained for the rest of his life. He graduated in 1951 with a thesis on the Russian poet Sergei Yesenin. The following year he made his literary debut with the novel Sei stato felice, Giovanni (1952), published by Einaudi. Arpino took up sports journalism, writing for the daily papers La Stampa and Il Giornale. Together with Gianni Brera at the La Gazzetta dello Sport, he brought a new literary quality to Italian writing on sport. His most important work in this line was the 1977 football novel Azzurro tenebra. In Italy, he got to know the Argentinian writer and fellow sports enthusiast Osvaldo Soriano. Arpino also wrote plays, short stories, epigrams, and stories for children. He won the Strega Prize in 1964 with L'ombra delle colline, the Premio Campiello of 1972 with Randagio è l'eroe, and the 1980 SuperCampiello with Il fratello italiano. His novels are characterised by a dry and ironic style. His novel Un delitto d'onore was adapted for film as Pietro Germi’s highly regarded 1962 comedy Divorce, Italian Style, starring Marcello Mastroianni. His story Il buio e il miele was adapted into two films: Dino Risi’s Profumo di donna, with Vittorio Gassman. American Martin Brest directed the English-language Scent of a Woman (1992), which earned Al Pacino an Academy Award for Best Actor. Arpino died in Turin in 1987. His birthplace of Bra has celebrated his links to that town by establishing a multifunctional cultural centre and a prize for children's literature. Works
In 2005 Mondadori published a volume of selected works edited by the literary critic Giorgio Bàrberi Squarotti. Filmography
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