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Mussolini Canal, The

`Winner of Italy`s prestigious Strega Prize in 2010, this is Antonio Pennacchi`s second novel. As the labyrinthine story unfolds, the reader scarcely needs Pennacchi`s prefatory note that: `For what it`s worth, this is the book I came into the world to write.` In every line The Mussolini Canal feels personal, as if its plot and cast emerge not from the writer`s imagination but from his marrow. A hefty work, of more than 500 pages, it is so beguiling one does not want it to end. Rambunctious and picaresque, it is the story of a generation of poverty-stricken peasants from the Veneto and Tuscany, who were enticed south in the 1930s by the promise of land in the dreaded Pontine marshes, near Rome. Until that time, nobody sane would have gone there, the place a mosquito-infested swamp. But under Mussolini`s fledgling rule, the marshes were properly drained for the first time in history, allowing land to be reclaimed, and many lives with it. Brilliantly controlling his material, retracing his steps, repeating stories from fresh angles, or simply reminding the reader of what they already know, Pennacchi`s style holds an echo of early Gunter Grass, but is infused with a spirit and tone that are entirely original. High among its charms is his rich vein of humour, a mordant leavening to otherwise grim material, as the Peruzzi family picks its way through the debris of half a century of troubles. Gathering pace slowly, as one grows familiar with its dizzying cast and the tale`s back and forth telling, it builds in tension like a spring being tightly coiled, creating a vigorous, unrepentant, anarchic picture of a clan surviving despite chaos all around.` Rosemary Goring in the Sunday Herald