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'''Fruttero & Lucentini''' (or '''F. & L.''') was the usual way for [[Carlo Fruttero]] and [[Franco Lucentini]] to sign their joint work, including novels, short stories, articles, anthologies. Their most successful works include the mysteries ''[[La donna della domenica]]'', turned into a movie directed by [[Luigi Comencini]], and ''[[A che punto è la notte]]''.
{{Unreferenced stub|auto=yes|date=December 2009}}

'''Fruttero & Lucentini''' (or '''F. & L.''') was the usual way for [[Carlo Fruttero]] and [[Franco Lucentini]] to sign their joint work: novels, short stories, articles, anthologies. They wrote a humorous completion of [[The Mystery of Edwin Drood]] entitled [[The D Case]].
They were also editors of the science fiction magazine ''[[Urania (magazine)|Urania]]'', and edited numerous science fiction or horror anthologies for [[Arnoldo Mondadori Editore]] until the mid-1980s.





Revision as of 06:13, 2 May 2010

Fruttero & Lucentini (or F. & L.) was the usual way for Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini to sign their joint work, including novels, short stories, articles, anthologies. Their most successful works include the mysteries La donna della domenica, turned into a movie directed by Luigi Comencini, and A che punto è la notte.

They were also editors of the science fiction magazine Urania, and edited numerous science fiction or horror anthologies for Arnoldo Mondadori Editore until the mid-1980s.