Descripción
Cocaine is the story of a young man who runs off to Paris to seek fame, fortune, and fun. Pitigrilli's classic novel charts the comedy and pathos of a young man's tragic trajectory. Tito Arnaudi is a dandified hero with several mistresses he juggles. A failed medical student, Tito is hired as a journalist in Paris, where he investigates cocaine dens and invents lurid scandals and gruesome deaths that he sells to newspapers as his own life becomes more outrageous than his phony press reports. Telling of orgies and strawberries soaked in champagne and ether, Tito lives with intensity as he pursues his Italian girlfriend Maud (n e Maddalena) and wealthy Armenian Kalantan, who insists on making love in a black coffin. Provocatively illustrated, filled with lush, intoxicating prose, Cocaine is a wicked novel about the Lost Generation in 1920s Paris. Dizzy and decadent, Pitigrilli leaves nothing unexplored as he presents astonishing descriptions of upper class debauching -- strawberries and chloroform, naked dancing, cocaine aplenty, and guests openly injecting morphine. Despite its wit, Cocaine is a sobering account of the dangers of drugs and sexual obsession. Tito happily trades in his twilight years for moments of wicked ecstasy.
Author: Pitigrilli
Publisher: Ronin Publishing (CA)
Published: 03/08/2016
Pages: 275
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.40w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9781579512187
ISBN10: 1579512186
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
Author: Pitigrilli
Publisher: Ronin Publishing (CA)
Published: 03/08/2016
Pages: 275
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.40w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9781579512187
ISBN10: 1579512186
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
About the Author
Pitigrilli is the pseudonym for Dino Segre (1893-1975), an Italian writer who made his living as a journalist and novelist. Published in 1921, Cocaine is Pitigrilli's most lauded work and placed on the forbidden books list by the Catholic Church. He founded the literary magazine Grandi Firme, which was published in Turin from 1924 to 1938, when it was banned by anti-Semitic Race Laws of the Fascist government. Although baptized as a Catholic, Segre was classified as Jewish and worked in the 1930s as an informant for OVRA, the Fascist secret service. Pitigrilli's efforts, beginning in 1938, to change his racial status failed and he was interned as a Jew in 1940 and was released later that year.

