Barbed wire in Bovec, Slovenia English I. I just finished reading "Giorni di Guerra" (“Days of War”), the war diary written by Giovanni Comisso, a prominent figure of Italian culture in the first half of the last century, now almost forgotten*. I had found Comisso in "Disobbedisco" (“I Disobey”), the fine book written by Giordano Bruno Guerri on the occasion of the centenary of the “Impresa Fiumana”—Fiume (the name Fiume is Italian, today the town is known as Rijeka, which has the same meaning as Fiume, i.e. river, in Croatian) was occupied by Italian "Legionaries" led by poet, writer, and war hero Gabriele D’Annunzio a year after the end of World War I, a war in which Comisso took part and of which he writes in "Days of War".
Days of War
Days of War
Days of War
Barbed wire in Bovec, Slovenia English I. I just finished reading "Giorni di Guerra" (“Days of War”), the war diary written by Giovanni Comisso, a prominent figure of Italian culture in the first half of the last century, now almost forgotten*. I had found Comisso in "Disobbedisco" (“I Disobey”), the fine book written by Giordano Bruno Guerri on the occasion of the centenary of the “Impresa Fiumana”—Fiume (the name Fiume is Italian, today the town is known as Rijeka, which has the same meaning as Fiume, i.e. river, in Croatian) was occupied by Italian "Legionaries" led by poet, writer, and war hero Gabriele D’Annunzio a year after the end of World War I, a war in which Comisso took part and of which he writes in "Days of War".