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5.0 out of 5 stars Philosophy and literature mingle...
Calvino rarely, if ever, disappoints. This book includes two early stories, both of which have everything you would expect from Calvino: surrealism, wisdom, fabulism, and poignancy derived from bizarre and unexpected sources. Reading them is a unique experience, much like reading anything Calvino has written; these stories, being earlier works, are slightly more...
Published on Aug 4 2003 by ewomack

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3.0 out of 5 stars Ok, but not his best work
As I'd previously read and enjoyed Calvino's The Baron in the Trees, I thought I'd try this collection of two novellas. While I more or less enjoyed the two stories, they're not quite as good as The Baron in the Trees. The first tale is of a knight whose every action is perfect, but has no physical body, he is literally an empty suit of armor. His perfection is an...
Published on April 10 2002 by A. Ross


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5.0 out of 5 stars Philosophy and literature mingle..., Aug 4 2003
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
Calvino rarely, if ever, disappoints. This book includes two early stories, both of which have everything you would expect from Calvino: surrealism, wisdom, fabulism, and poignancy derived from bizarre and unexpected sources. Reading them is a unique experience, much like reading anything Calvino has written; these stories, being earlier works, are slightly more conventional (for Calvino) in that they follow a plot line and a story unfolds linearly (contrasted with later works such as "Invisible Cities" or "Cosmicomics" where there's a story, but not in a completely conventional sense).

"The Nonexistent Knight" is about just that: a knight in Charlemagne's army who doesn't exist, but "inhabits" an empty suit of armor. The knight, Agilulf, is an exemplar of chivalry, and annoys almost everyone. When the validity of his knighthood is brought into question, a great chase ensues between the main characters of the story, which, when the smoke clears, culminates in a "confession" of the narrator. The story's mood is a strangely profound tongue-in-cheek. It is moving, funny, and intense.

"The Cloven Viscount", by contrast, is a harsh and violent story that includes enough whimsy to keep it from sinking into a hopelessly depressing tale. After the mostly upbeat feel of "The Nonexistent Knight" the brutal imagery of this story is shocking. The story involves a Viscount who is in fact cloven, that is, literally cloven in two by a Turkish cannon. He is not only cloven physically, but in other more interesting ways. The implications this story presents are numerous and incredibly thought-provoking. When the two halves of the Viscount occupy the same town, the feelings of the townsfolk are summed up in this brilliant passage: "...our sensibilities became numbed, since we felt ourselves lost between an evil and a virtue equally inhuman."

This short book is another incredible example of the writing of Italo Calvino. It may not be his absolute best work, but even Calvino at his worst makes for engaging and unforgettable reading. His stories defy description and stretch the boundaries of literature beyond what is usually expected. After reading one of his books, you just want to read more.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating mix of Existentialism and Medieval History, July 8 2002
By 
Rebecca M (Somerville, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
Calvino's fascination with the Middle Ages seems almost satirical in these two very tongue-in-cheek novellas. In no way a beach read, these two pseudo-existential stories deal with basic principles of existence (or non-existence) after the fashion of a parable with omniscient narration.

The characters are colorful, although sometimes the development is somewhat open-ended. Calvino molds his characters is such a way that one is not sure with whom to have sympathy. This perhaps is the novelist's greatest statement in showing the definitions of "good" and "evil" to be somewhat grey.

Highly recommended read...think Italian Beckett.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Ok, but not his best work, April 10 2002
By 
A. Ross (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
As I'd previously read and enjoyed Calvino's The Baron in the Trees, I thought I'd try this collection of two novellas. While I more or less enjoyed the two stories, they're not quite as good as The Baron in the Trees. The first tale is of a knight whose every action is perfect, but has no physical body, he is literally an empty suit of armor. His perfection is an aphrodisiac to a female knight who has contempt for all other men, but finds him irresistible. Meanwhile, a naive young knight follows her around like a puppy. Meanwhile, another young knight seeks out the Order of the Holy Grail, who he claims as having fathered him. There's a kind of Shakespearean comedy element to all of this, especially in the hasty and tidy conclusion. However, one has to read it as a fable instructing us that though we seek spiritual and earthly perfection, they may not turn out to be what we want.

The second tale is of a nobleman cut in half whose two halves live separately on: one evil, one good. This is a more straightforward and compact story, and clearly a warning against extremism of any kinds. The evil side is truly nasty, and the good one starts out beloved, but eventfully gets too pushy and interfering for everyone's good. Eventually the two halves are rejoined to make a balanced personality and everyone lives happily ever after.

Both stories can also be read as existentialist meditations on the meaning of existence. They can also be read with an eye toward the horrors of WWII and the nature of evil. In the first tale, Charlemagne and his knights are bumbling fools for the most part, but still manage to engage in a bloody war. In the second, a carpenter's expertise is enlisted to create more and more elaborate torture and hanging devices, while a doctor abandons his commitment to helping people. In any event, if you like Calvino's other fabulist work, you'll like these two novellas, but they're probably not the place to start if you're unfamiliar with his work.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Fairy tales for adults, May 14 2001
By 
Scott M. Craig (Overland Park, KS United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
I'm a huge fan of Italo Calvino, but it is hard to describe exactly what quality makes his books so wonderful. In one sense, this book is two fables that read like adult fairy tales: a knight who inhabits or doesn't a suit of armor and a nobleman who is split into two distinct personalities. He also has a style of writing that is almost liquid and translucent - it absolutely glitters. I would add that the translation is superb. I highly recommend this book to anyone.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Cloven Viscount is brilliant!, May 3 2001
By 
Rhys Hughes (Swansea, Wales, Europe) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
Viscount Medardo of Terralba has ridden across the plain of Bohemia to join the war against the Turks. When battle commences, he flings himself into the mêlée. Young and foolish, he attacks a Turkish cannon from the front and receives a cannonball in the chest. His left half is completely blown away. After dusk, during a truce, his remains are gathered up and operated on by the surgeons. Miraculously, they are able to save his right half; now he is "alive and cloven".

Thus begins Calvino's first fantasy, one of the most highly imaginative and amusing of his modern fables. Published in Italy in 1951, The Cloven Viscount was Calvino's attempt at writing the sort of book he would like to read himself, the sort of book "by an unknown writer, from another age and another country, discovered in an attic."

Until then, Calvino had practised realism, charting postwar upheaval and social concerns in his native country. Yet The Cloven Viscount seems to have more to say about the human condition in times of crisis than his earlier works. For example, the nature of good and evil and the incompleteness of the soul are themes explored here in depth. But The Cloven Viscount is not a straightforward allegory or purely symbolic text. Calvino was pleased that the meanings of his tales were "always a little uncertain" and that "no single key will turn all their locks."

Leaning heavily on a crutch, the Viscount returns home and starts causing mischief. It soon becomes clear that it is the bad half of the Viscount that has survived. He begins to terrify the local peasants with his cruel and spiteful acts, spending much of his time cutting in half everything he can get his hands on. It is his wish, he confesses, to "halve every whole thing... as there's beauty and knowledge and justice only in what's been cut to shreds."

The narrator, the Viscount's nephew, does his best to stay out of his uncle's way. Together with Dr Trelawney, an alcoholic scientist, he wanders graveyards at night, looking for wills-o'-the wisp. It is Dr Trelawney's ambition to capture one in a bottle. Yet the Viscount spares no efforts in attempting to murder the pair of them and the rest of the population, aided in his nefarious schemes by Master Pietrochiodo, a carpenter cursed with a genius for constructing unusual apparatus of torture and execution.

The reign of terror is only threatened when the Viscount's other half turns up. Tended by necromancers after the battle, this other half has been travelling across the land, performing good deeds. The Bad 'Un and the Good 'Un, as they are respectively known, constantly try to outdo each other. Ironically, the Good 'Un manages to cause as much trouble as the Bad 'Un.

With its wealth of invention, peculiar ideas and extraordinary insights, The Cloven Viscount paved the way for Calvino's more mature work. Like Baron in the Trees and The Non-Existent Knight, books with which it forms a loose triptych, The Cloven Viscount began as a single image; the image of a man cut in two but still alive. It was this image alone which dictated the development of the story.

Calvino is rightly regarded as the author of some of the most wildly creative imaginative fiction in Europe. The Cloven Viscount shows where it all began.

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5.0 out of 5 stars excellent novella... (The Cloven Viscount), April 10 2001
By 
"daverod" (Queens, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
Calvino writes with a certain flair that is unmistakably pure genius. He covers deeply intellectual themes in seemingly simple manners. I could not help but compare his writing to that of Dickens, written with a sort of erudition that is very difficult to find. The novel flows in such a manner that one cannot put it down, as I read it in one sitting. He is in my opinion one of the best writers of the modern era.

In this novel, he wants the reader to see that even goodness in its purest form lacks true wholeness. He intends to show the reader that one cannot have good without evil and vice versa. In order to achieve true happiness, one must find a balance between these two completely opposite forces within oneself. The treatment of the different themes in the story is very appropriate, and he uses ingenious symbolism to illustrate his points. I certainly recommend this novel to anyone with the slightest interest in modern or gothic literature. You can be certain that you will enjoy it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Please Read It, Aug 8 2000
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
If you are considering reading this book, you should read it. Calvino's prose is the wittiest, funniest, silliest and wisest prose written in the last fifty years. The uncanny ability to combine universals with particulars is a vanishing skill, yet Calvino pulls us along his philosophical adventures, sweetening the path with hilarious characters and wonderful scenarios. This will certainly open your eyes to a different world.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Highly Recommended, Friends, July 21 2000
By 
Mark Valentine (Port Angeles, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
These are wonderful novellas. Written as fables, there appeal lies on one level as simple fictional tales about knights and castles, so it could be something that children could enjoy quite easily. From there, it grows. Calvino packs so much wisdom and inquisitiveness into these stories, that it takes on the form of a metaphysical inquiry into morality, epistomology, and science. In "The Nonexistent Knight," the penultimate hollow man shuffles through Charlemagne's Europe maintaining some kind of external order, at least. That's all he has to offer to the world, of course, because there is nothing inside the shell. Don't you know people like that?

Then in "The Cloven Viscount," a parable in an ethical style, Calvino splits a person in two and takes the reader on the journey of exploring all the ramifications of that fissure.

I believe these could be taught in a philosophy course, a literature course, read at the bedside with junior, and taken to the beach for summer reading, and an easy book to talk about at a dinner party or in a book group.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Great modern tales, Dec 8 1999
By 
Giuseppe A. Paleologo "gappy" (Riverdale, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
"The Nonexistent Knight", the "Cloven Viscount" and "The Baron in the Trees" are often referred to as "the fantasy trilogy" of Calvino. If anything, they show that there are still writers able to invent timeless tales. In this respect, Calvino is a modern-time heir of H.C.Handersen, with the only difference that Calvino is a writer of greater narrative range: he can spin a yarn on infinite variations of folk tales and write a symmetry-obsessed novel like "The castle of Crossed Destinies". The trilogy is written in a linear style that is lyrical and simple. I read them in italian in my 4th grade, and loved them. I picked them again 20 years later and loved them even more (esp. The Cloven Viscount). The stories touch upon themes like friendship, love, identity, freedom. It's hard to dislike them.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Maravilloso, una lectura imprescindible!!, Nov 15 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount (Paperback)
Una de las mejores y mas intensas lecturas. Un autor imprescindible de la literatura fantastica.
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The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount
The Nonexistent Knight and The Cloven Viscount by Italo Calvino (Paperback - Feb 28 1977)
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