Altri Mondi (or Altrimondi, Italian for "Other Worlds") was a collection of science fiction novels published by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore from 1986 to 1993.
In 2008 he returned as radio host on R101 (the former Radio Milano International), and became deputy-president of Monradio (the radio division of Arnoldo Mondadori Editore).
Arnoldo Mondadori Editore | Arnoldo Iguarán | Arnoldo Alemán | Arnoldo Foà | David Arnoldo Cabrera | Arnoldo Zocchi |
La donna della domenica, Mondadori, 1972 (translated into English by William Weaver as The Sunday Woman in 1973) - The first and most famous novel by F&L, and one of the first examples of Italian crime novels; winner of the "Il Libro dell'Anno" award.
In Italy, it is owned by the Mondadori (one of Silvio Berlusconi's companies), and is owned in the UK under licence by Bauer Consumer Media.
Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright did not build anything in Italy, as opposed to Alvar Aalto (Church of the Assumption in Riola, Vergato), Kenzo Tange (towers of Bologna Fair, the floor of Naples central business district (CDN)) and Oscar Niemeyer (home of Mondadori in Segrate).
He released Fa un po' male (It's a little bad) on 1 June 2004 by Giulio Einaudi which had a Davide Fabbri illustrated cover.
It is the story of The Twentieth Century told by a last, and is inspired by the Terra Matta, a memoir published by Einaudi in 2007, written in approximate Italian by Vincenzo Rabito (class 1899), a former laborer and Sicilian worker semi-literate but of great narrative ability, who attended the world War I and African adventure (in Ogaden).