Mario dell’Arco - Day Lasts Forever

Mario dell’Arco
Day Lasts Forever: Selected Poems

Translated from Romanesco by
MARC ALAN DI MARTINO

$20.00

168 pages

November 12, 2024

ISBN 978-1-954218-27-7

Distributed by Asterism (US) and Turnaround Publisher Services (UK & EU)

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BIOS

MARIO DELL’ARCO, the pen name of Mario Fagiolo (Rome, 1905–1996) was the most significant Romanesco poet of the latter half of the twentieth century. An architect by profession, he abandoned architecture for poetry after World War II. He published nearly 60 books and chapbooks of poetry in his lifetime. His work is marked by its bittersweet, almost jaded stance, a hallmark of the Roman attitude towards life (and death).

MARC ALAN DI MARTINO is the author of the collections Love Poem with Pomegranate (Ghost City Press), Still Life with City (Pski's Porch), and Unburial (Kelsay). His poems and translations appear in Bad Lilies, Palette Poetry, Rattle, and many other journals and anthologies. His work has been nominated for both the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Day Lasts Forever is his first book of translation. He lives in Italy. 

 
 

Mario dell’Arco
Day Lasts Forever: Selected Poems

Translated from Romanesco by
MARC ALAN DI MARTINO

 

The first English-language collection of post-war poet Mario dell’Arco, the most significant voice in modern Roman dialect poetry after Belli and Trilussa.

Dell’Arco (1905–1996) wrote concise, epigrammatic poems about personal loss and everyday astonishment. His stance was skeptical and bittersweet, yet infused with a sense of epiphany at every turn. Deeply influenced by Martial, Horace and the poets of the Greek anthology, he published roughly 60 collections of Romanesco verse in a career which spanned half a century. His subjects included cats, wine, and of course his beloved native city of Rome. His work is colored by the death of his infant son, about whom he wrote often and movingly. Critically acclaimed in his lifetime—Pier Paolo Pasolini was an early admirer—his work has never before been available to a general readership in English.



“I'm not sure if this is a book, a butterfly, or a handful of angels.” —Pier Paolo Pasolini

“The poet Marc Alan Di Martino is a formal virtuoso, as dexterous as they come. He is the perfect match for Mario dell’Arco, a poet who played his native dialect, Romanesco, like a priceless musical instrument. Di Martino exploits all the resources of English to produce a music every bit as alluring as dell’Arco’s own, as intoxicating as the Genzano wine the Italian master praises: ‘With every glass another feather sprouts / on my wings, heaven grows kinder.’ It is impossible to get one’s fill of such poetry.” —Boris Dralyuk

“Mario dell'Arco's short poems bring alive daily life in Rome in a unique colloquial voice that often feels like a blend of Martial's humor, Giuseppe Belli's grittiness, and the surrealists of the era. Di Martino deftly handles dell'Arco's unconventional rhythms and rhymes in ways that are admirably faithful to the original poems.” —A.M. Juster

“With his illuminating introduction and intrepid translations, Di Martino has done Anglophone readers of Italian poetry a great service: Mario dell'Arco can now take a well deserved a spot on our shelves alongside such giants of Romanesco poetry as Belli, Pascarella, and Trilussa.” —Geoffrey Brock

 

BIOS

MARIO DELL’ARCO, the pen name of Mario Fagiolo (Rome, 1905–1996) was the most significant Romanesco poet of the latter half of the twentieth century. An architect by profession, he abandoned architecture for poetry after World War II. He published nearly 60 books and chapbooks of poetry in his lifetime. His work is marked by its bittersweet, almost jaded stance, a hallmark of the Roman attitude towards life (and death).

MARC ALAN DI MARTINO is the author of the collections Love Poem with Pomegranate (Ghost City Press), Still Life with City (Pski's Porch), and Unburial (Kelsay). His poems and translations appear in Bad Lilies, Palette Poetry, Rattle, and many other journals and anthologies. His work has been nominated for both the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Day Lasts Forever is his first book of translation. He lives in Italy. 

PRESS

Reviewed by Eric Bies for Open Letters Review

Excerpt at The Los Angeles Review

 

168 pages

November 12, 2024

ISBN 978-1-954218-27-7

Distributed by Asterism (US) and Turnaround Publisher Services (UK & EU)

 
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