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Italian Education
Tim Parks

Harper Perennial, 1996 - 352 pages

average customer review:based on 25 reviews
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Living in Italy/Italian life

I have read two of Tim Parks books and have even sent them to my daughter who recently moved to Italy. His books talk about real life things in Italy that she has also encountered.
It was enjoyable reading them in succession because I could see how he had been adapting to the new culture and different ways of doing things.
A must read for anyone thinking about moving to Italy and a pleasant read for anyone who wants to learn more about the "real" country of Italy. It's not the touristy stuff it's the regular people stuff and it's a fun read.


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Interesting read

I enjoyed this sequel to Italian Neighbors. Mr. Parks gives us a glimpse into the real Italian family and day to day life.









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Expendable Italians?

Tim Parks writes remarkably well and can describe situations with painstaking insight. Yet, when he deals with Italy, he may become unbearably patronizing. I often wonder whether his books generally aim at explaining Italy or at reassuring English readers of their supposed superiority to the Italian comedy of questionable manners and corrupted politics.

In the past, Tim Parks has lived in the United States for long. Will he eventually have the courage to contend with American social mores with the same acerbic wit he employs with the Italians?


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Growing up Italian

I enjoyed this book (as I enjoyed most of Parks' others) particularly because it was an interesting look at parents and children, and especially how our childhoods create the adults who fit into a certain milieu. How does an Italian/British/American child grow up into an adult that can navigate the ins and outs of the particular culture to which it belongs? It's an interesting topic for me, especially as I'm an American who mostly grew up overseas, and I was interested in Parks' musings on how his children would grow up with radically different assumptions about how the world works than he did.

Unlike some reviewers, I didn't notice Parks being especially whiny, and for me the book captured my interest throughout.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5



Tim Parks' first bestseller, Italian Neighbors, chronicled his initiation into Italian society and cultural life. Reviewers everywhere hailed it as a bravissimo performance. Now he turns to his children -- born and bred in Italy -- and their milieu in a small village near Verona.

With the splendid eye for detail, character, and intrigue that has brought him acclaim as a novelist, he creates a fascinating portrait of Italian family life, at school, at home, in church, and in the countryside. This panoramic journey winds up with a deliciously seductive evocation of an Italian beach holiday that epitomizes everything that is quintessentially Italian. Here is an insider's Italy, re-created by "one of the most gifted writers of his generation" (Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post)




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