Author
Giuseppe Guerzoni
1835-1886
Giuseppe Guerzoni (1835-1886) is a public-domain author available on Rivro. Read free books, explore subjects, and discover related classics.
Subjects
Books by Giuseppe Guerzoni
Garibaldi, Vol. 1 (of 2) : $b (1807-1859)
"Garibaldi, Vol. 1 (of 2) : (1807-1859)" by Giuseppe Guerzoni is a historical account written in the late 19th century. This work serves as a biography of Giuseppe Garibaldi, a central figure in the unification of Italy, outlining his early life, military exploits, and profound influence on Italian history. The book promises to delve into Garibaldi’s character, exploring the complexities and nuances of his personality while also highlighting the pivotal events that shaped his legendary status. The opening of the text provides a preface in which Guerzoni expresses his deep admiration for Garibaldi, reflecting on his personal experiences alongside the iconic leader. The author recounts his time spent with Garibaldi, from high-stakes military encounters to intimate moments on Caprera, emphasizing Garibaldi's charisma and the intricate political landscape of 19th-century Italy. Guerzoni sets the stage for a comprehensive exploration of Garibaldi's early life, beginning with his birth in Nice, and hints at the many challenges and triumphs that lay ahead in the narrative of a man destined for greatness. The emphasis on family, formative experiences, and the initial stirrings of rebellion against oppression create an engaging backdrop for the unfolding saga of Garibaldi.
Garibaldi, Vol. 2 (of 2) : $b (1860-1882)
"Garibaldi, Vol. 2 (of 2) : (1860-1882)" by Giuseppe Guerzoni is a historical account written in the late 19th century. This volume delves into the pivotal years of Garibaldi's life, focusing on his contributions to the unification of Italy during the tumultuous period from 1860 to 1882. The narrative likely highlights key events, political struggles, and Garibaldi's character as a revolutionary leader. The opening of this volume sets the stage for Garibaldi's involvement in the insurrection in Sicily and the subsequent military actions that contributed to the unification of Italy. Initially, the narrative examines the political landscape following the return of the Count of Cavour to power and the resulting alliances and conflicts surrounding Italian territorial aspirations. As Gar
La tratta dei fanciulli : $b racconto sociale
"La tratta dei fanciulli: racconto sociale" by Giuseppe Guerzoni is a social novel written in the late 19th century. It denounces the organized trafficking of poor Southern Italian children who are sold to intermediaries and forced to beg and perform across Europe, following the siblings Carluccio and Stefanella from Calabria to Paris. Mixing narrative and exposé, it indicts public apathy, clerical complicity, and governmental indifference. The opening of the work begins with a fervent preface arguing that the scandal persists despite debate and promises of reform. The story then moves to the bleak Calabrian village of Ritorto, where lo Storpiato, a maimed ex‑brigand, and his wife Marinella, in desperate poverty, sell their children Carluccio and Stefanella to a trafficker, with a priest’s paid blessing sealing the deal. Shipped with dozens of other children to Marseille and on to Paris, they are numbered, confined in a stinking dormitory, and drilled in the arts of street performance and strategic begging by a clandestine network. Initially successful on the boulevards, they face envy, harsher quotas, and punishments that deny food unless cash targets are met, until Stefanella collapses from hunger and is briefly hospitalized before being reclaimed by the organization. The section closes with the narrative widening its critique to the charitable and civic systems that fail to protect such children.
Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 3/3 : $b storia d'una famiglia di patriotti
"Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 3/3 : storia d'una famiglia di patriotti" by Guerzoni is a historical novel written in the late 19th century. Set amid the Piedmontese ferment of revolution, it follows a family of patriots swept into student uprisings, military mutinies, and the court’s intrigues around Carlo Alberto’s hesitation. The narrative centers on ardent young conspirators like Giorgio Santafiori, Ernesto Gastone, and Pietro Muschietti, counterpoised with the calculating Salomone Arena and the magistrate Tacchini. Expect action, political maneuvering, and stark moral choices about loyalty, love, and sacrifice. The opening of the novel moves from the bloody repression of students in Turin to the first sparks of revolt: Alessandria rises, while Ferrero attempts a daring but understrength sortie near Porta Nuova, saved only when Ernesto shoots down a royal colonel who tries to sway the troops. Inside the Turin Citadel, Gambini and Giorgio seize the initiative by overpowering the commander Des Geneis, hoisting tricolors and rallying the garrison, which pushes the wavering Carlo Alberto to proclaim a constitution after Muschietti confronts him at gunpoint. The scene then shifts to a provincial town where the ruthless Sindaco Salomone Arena begs help for his arrested son and strikes a sordid bargain with Tacchini: his daughter Giusta’s hand in marriage in exchange for acquittal and safe-conduct. Arena intercepts letters, reveals that Giorgio too has been imprisoned, and, under family pressure, Giusta consents in principle while seeking proof. A brief historical interlude sketches the revolution’s weaknesses and the court’s countermoves, before returning to Giorgio on sentry duty overhearing the prince’s midnight soliloquy, torn between revolutionary promises and dynastic loyalty.
Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 1/3 : $b storia d'una famiglia di patriotti
"Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 1/3: storia d'una famiglia di patriotti" by Guerzoni is a historical novel written in the late 19th century. It presents a sweeping family chronicle centered on the seafarer Battista Santafiori, a figure inspired by Garibaldi’s spirit, whose life intersects with the American, Haitian, and French revolutions. The narrative explores ideals of liberty, abolition, and civic duty while following the fortunes and faults of a family of “patriots.” This first volume focuses on the father’s odyssey and the moral legacy he tries to instill in his children. The opening of the narrative begins with a preface recounting the book’s composition at Caprera and the loss and reconstruction of parts of the manuscript, then declares Battista Santafiori the living embodiment of humane courage learned at sea. We meet him as a Genoese boy, “Baciccia/Murena,” who becomes a master mariner, reforms his friend Livio (the son of Captain Gordiglia) after rescuing him from a brawl, and builds fortune only to spend it generously. He rejects the slave trade, founds an enlightened plantation in Virginia where he frees and fairly employs Black workers, debates with George Washington, and fights for the American cause as a privateer and blockade runner. Summoned by the Haitian uprising, he saves Livio’s widow Rosalia and her child from the “terror nero,” later marrying her and settling near Nice, where his philanthropy grows as his faith in Napoleonic “glory” wanes; the family expands (including stepson Michele), finances strain, and Battista returns to the sea. The section closes by contrasting Battista’s moral rigor with Michele’s vanity and idleness: sent to school in Genoa, the youth is dazzled by imperial pageantry and falls into the orbit of a calculating seductress—setting the stage for future trouble.
Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 2/3 : $b storia d'una famiglia di patriotti
"Memorie d'un disertore, vol. 2/3 : storia d'una famiglia di patriotti" by Guerzoni is a historical novel written in the late 19th century. Set in the Restoration era, it follows the Santafiori family—especially the young Giorgio—as grief, conscription, a forbidden love, and the stirrings of patriotic conspiracy pit them against local power and a hostile order. The focus is a family saga of Italian patriots where personal loyalties collide with duty and resistance. The opening of the novel moves from a graveside encounter—where Giorgio and Giusta confess their love and pledge fidelity—into the tense village ritual of conscription, where Giorgio draws the dreaded first number. At home, his mother Rosalia and sister Livia reel from the news, and the family seeks strength before the father’s portrait. A secret nighttime meeting at Giusta’s window turns violent when her domineering father springs a trap: Giorgio is lightly wounded by shot, while Giusta is locked away; only the family’s heroic mastiff “Leone” carries their urgent letters between them. Finding among his late father Battista’s papers a lucid call to join the Carboneria, Giorgio resolves to seek initiation and act for Italy; he leaves under a pretext and the section closes with him on the road toward Turin, troubled but determined.