Rights
We handle the rights for many of our books, and you can download our most recent Rights Guide.
Ghost Tracks
This is a novel about the illusion that beauty is the law that rules on everything, it’s about confusing art and real life, and about how our sorrow, but also our happiness, are caused by this misconception.
Don Quixote in Sicily
Roberto Mandracchia manages to play with the entire literature, to celebrate it, to have fun and make us enjoy.
Born in Gomorrah
To be born, grow up and die in a normal family in the land of camorra. The most powerful memoir of the year.
To Turn Off the Light and Look at the World Now and Then
The letters have the priceless merit to show how Woolf presented herself to others, the way she wanted to be perceived, understood and remembered.
The War of the Bumpkins
This new novel by Carlo D’Amicis is at once a chivalric poem and a social satire, a coming-of-age novel and a comedy of modern Italy, where the violent clash between the classes is, at once, distant and quotidian.
Great Oniric Age
A big and a wrong love, a defeated depression, a moving novel that refuses resignation. The burning debut of a young Italian writer.
Young Lions
A book that is a challenge and wants to narrate what still doesn't exist, with the visionary eye of literature.
The Little Lexicon of The Big Exodus
An agile consultation and reflection tool to properly understand the migrant crisis trough 83 lemmas.
Cinema For The First Time
Bernardo Bertolucci racconta se stesso e il suo cinema in circa quaranta interviste che ne ripercorrono mezzo secolo di film.
The Flood
On the track of Tondelli, Cisi gives us a bittersweet story set in the Italian province of the noughties.
Economy in Seven Steps
Becchetti gives us access to a fascinating and decisive world.
Writing for their lives
D’Antona brings us on the roads of America through long walking tours, flights from East to West Coast, on legendary Greyhound buses, and accompanies us on the Manhattan attics and Midwest diners.
I Hate John Updike
According to someone Italy had found its Francis Bacon, or its David Lynch.