Images and Shadows: Difference between revisions
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'''''Images and Shadows''''' is a book by [[Iris Origo]], the Irish-American writer who spent most of her life in Italy. She owned and lived in the Tuscan estate of [[La Foce]]. It was first published by [[John Murray ( |
'''''Images and Shadows''''' is a book by [[Iris Origo]], the Irish-American writer who spent most of her life in Italy. She owned and lived in the Tuscan estate of [[La Foce]]. It was first published by [[John Murray (publishing house)|John Murray]] in 1970.<ref>{{cite book|publisher=WorldCat|oclc = 860534888}}</ref> |
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The autobiography encompasses Origo's affluent New York/Long Island background, her childhood in [[Villa Medici in Fiesole]] and her progression to the Anglo-American artistic coterie in Florence; it then goes on to her marriage to an Italian (Antonio Origo)<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/21/books/under-the-tuscan-sun.html|newspaper=New York Times|accessdate=17 June 2014|title=Under the Tuscan Sun|date=2002-07-21|last1=Weber|first1=Nicholas Fox}}</ref> and, after the war, her life as an established author. |
The autobiography encompasses Origo's affluent New York/Long Island background, her childhood in [[Villa Medici in Fiesole]] and her progression to the Anglo-American artistic coterie in Florence; it then goes on to her marriage to an Italian (Antonio Origo)<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/21/books/under-the-tuscan-sun.html|newspaper=New York Times|accessdate=17 June 2014|title=Under the Tuscan Sun|date=2002-07-21|last1=Weber|first1=Nicholas Fox}}</ref> and, after the war, her life as an established author. |
Revision as of 02:16, 5 June 2020
Images and Shadows is a book by Iris Origo, the Irish-American writer who spent most of her life in Italy. She owned and lived in the Tuscan estate of La Foce. It was first published by John Murray in 1970.[1]
The autobiography encompasses Origo's affluent New York/Long Island background, her childhood in Villa Medici in Fiesole and her progression to the Anglo-American artistic coterie in Florence; it then goes on to her marriage to an Italian (Antonio Origo)[2] and, after the war, her life as an established author.
References