Rights
We handle the rights for many of our books, and you can download our most recent Rights Guide.
The Earth International
Giuseppe De Marzo proposes a "patient" yet radical model for rethinking, first and foremost, humanity's role within the planet.
Or, Nothing
In a desperate attempt to find meaning in his existence, the protagonist sets himself an "expiration date": two years, before following in his father's footsteps to the end and ending his own life.
Italy-Ukraine, one-way?
Italy-Ukraine, one way? is a narrative reportage of the first months of the war in Ukraine, but also a lucid and ironic account of the profession of journalism in war zones.
Family Wardrobe
A DELICATE AND ORIGINAL DEBUT, THE STORY OF A FAMILY TOLD THROUGH ITS CLOTHES AND THE AUTHOR'S PERSONAL PHOTOGRAPHS, STRIKING IN ITS INTENSITY AND GRACE
Talking About Love
Sofia Torre tries to map the state of things in terms of love and sex.
The Scortanza
Only stories, half true and half false, which then, at the end, boil into lies, stories, and fables, all in the same pot, making pizza and soup.
The God of the People
Carola Susani's voice finally returns to tell us about people and myths so concrete that they go beyond the sheet to sit next to us, giving life to a painful and deformed coming-of-age novel.
The Wind Plows the Sky
Dario Lanfranca, with his first novel, weaves delicately a story that expands from the particular to the general: the mafia like a gas with no odor that permeates everything, the detonator of an inevitable change
The Night Still Scares You
Seven protagonists who, despite belonging to different and distant lands and eras, find each other in an individual and collective memory
Who Killed Anna Karenina?
A pamphlet on femicide in literature, a critical essay that has profoundly innovated the reflection on gender
Born in Gomorrah
To be born, grow up and die in a normal family in the land of camorra. The most powerful memoir of the year.
To Turn Off the Light and Look at the World Now and Then
The letters have the priceless merit to show how Woolf presented herself to others, the way she wanted to be perceived, understood and remembered.