Emma Perodi facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Emma Perodi
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Born | Cerreto Guidi (Florence), Tuscany, Italy |
January 31, 1850
Died | March 5, 1918 Palermo, Sicily, Italy |
(aged 68)
Genre | Children's literature |
Notable works | Le novelle della nonna |
Emma Perodi (31 January 1850, Cerreto Guidi - 5 March 1918, Palermo) was an Italian writer and journalist; best known for her children's books.
Biography
For many years, it was uncertain if she had been born in Florence or Fiesole but, in the 1980s, a baptismal certificate was found that placed her birth in Cerreto Guidi. Her father, Federigo, was an engineer, and her mother, Adelaide Morelli Adimari had noble origins. She received an expensive education and was allowed the freedom to travel throughout much of Italy and Europe.
Her literary growth, however, took place mainly in Florence. From 1881, she was a collaborator and then, from 1887, director of the Children's Journal (Giornale per i bambini), which was published in Rome. Ferdinando Martini was its founder and first director.
Her best known work is Grandma's Stories (Le novelle della nonnaCasentino, published in installments between 1892 and 1893. Although designed for children, some of the stories contain Gothic elements that can be appreciated by adults. She also did translations; notably the first Italian edition of Elective Affinities by Goethe; in collaboration with Arnaldo de Mohr .
), a collection of fantastic stories set inShe died from pneumonia in Palermo, where she had spent over twenty years working for the publishing firm of Salvatore Biondo.
In July, 2018, a park in Casentino was dedicated to her.
- Piero Scapecchi, Una donna tra le fate. Ricerche sulla vita e sulle opere di Emma Perodi, Edizioni della Biblioteca Rilliana, 1993
- La valle dei racconti. In Casentino con Emma Perodi, Paolo Ciampi and Alberta Piroci (Eds.), Aska Edizioni, 2019
See also
In Spanish: Emma Perodi para niños