His reportage was published in the Italian edition of Condé Nast Traveler monthly magazine. having published his first novel, Jack Frusciante Has Left the Band. In 2008 a new trip brought Brizzi from Rome to Jerusalem, walking in southern Italy on the ancient Via Appia, and in Israel on the Israel National Trail. I will start from Enrico Brizzis trilogy Epopea Fantastorica Italiana (2008-2012). His reportage was published in issues 30-34 of the leading Italian weekly magazine L’espresso.īrizzi then published Bastogne, translated to French, German and Spanish, and five more novels for major Italian publishers the most recent in 2005, Nessuno lo saprà – Viaggio a piedi dall’Argentario al Conero, based on a real life experience of a trekking through Tuscany, Umbria and the Marches from the Tyrrhenian Sea coast to the Adriatic sea one. In 2006 Brizzi walked (and biked) for three months from Canterbury to Rome along the ancient pilgrims’ path known as Via Francigena. In language that sparks with infectious energy and ironic humor, Jack Frusciante Has Left the Band has all the immediacy of a snapshot and the enduring resonance of a Catcher in the Rye for. It also inspired the same name Italian movie in 1996. Enrico Brizzi is Italy’s most highly acclaimed and best-selling young writer, as well as one of its hottest literary exports and best-loved cult figures. He is best known for his debut novel Jack Frusciante Has Left the Band, which is so far the only one translated into English (along with other 23 languages). Enrico Brizzi (born in Bologna, November 20, 1974) is an Italian writer.
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