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The Leopard
by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa · 1958
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This is one of the very few novels that I’ve read twice. My lasting memory of it, and I think why it plays such a special role for me, is that it’s such a poignant and touching and unflinching depiction of change, and of when people feel caught out by change, and how the old order feels about the introduction of new customs and new regimes. There’s this kind of wistful way in which the prince describes his own inability to move with the times. For anyone who’s interested in Europe, where we’ve just seen this ceaseless ebb and flow of the new replacing the old, I just don’t think you can find a better book to summarise the wisdom and the conservatism and nostalgia that any order that is having to make way for a new order feels.
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"This is one of the very few novels that I’ve read twice. My lasting memory of it, and I think why it plays such a special role for me, is that it’s such a poignant and touching and unflinching depiction of change, and of when people feel caught out by change, and how the old order feels about the introduction of new customs and new regimes. There’s this kind of wistful way in which the prince describes his own inability to move with the times. For anyone who’s interested in Europe, where we’ve just seen this ceaseless ebb and flow of the new replacing the old, I just don’t think you can find a better book to summarise the wisdom and the conservatism and nostalgia that any order that is having to make way for a new order feels."
"What's the last great book you read? "The Leopard," by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa."
"I asked a friend what her favorite book was and she recommended this. I knew once I'd read it that I had excellent taste in friends."
"His novel "The Leopard" is one of my favorite books, so I read any scrap that he left."
"Lampedusa's "The Leopard," though anecdotal evidence proves you have to be over the age of 30 — or a premature nostalgic — to see it for the masterpiece it is."