Andrea Foschini Scrittore Apr 2026

The novel interweaves real historical figures (Major Norman Lewis, the writer and intelligence officer) with fictional ones. Foschini’s innovation is to treat the Allied liberation as an ambiguous crime scene: the Americans and British are not saviors but looters, exploiters of prostitution rings, and arbiters of a new black market.

Foschini employs a dual temporal structure: the crime occurs in 1975, but the narration moves between the children’s diaries (written in a raw, ungrammatical Italian) and Del Duca’s 1990s retrospective analysis. The “clan” is not a criminal organization but a survival network. The novel’s twist is that the murderer is not a camorrista but a local Christian Democrat politician who needed to silence a child who had witnessed illegal waste trafficking. Andrea Foschini Scrittore

Author: [Your Name] Course: Letteratura Italiana Contemporanea Date: [Current Date] Abstract This paper examines the narrative work of contemporary Italian writer Andrea Foschini (b. 1973, Salerno). While not as internationally renowned as Elena Ferrante or Alessandro Baricco, Foschini occupies a significant niche in modern Italian letters: the fusion of historical inquiry, detective fiction, and regional memory. Through analysis of his major works—particularly Il clan dei bambini (2016) and Napoli 1944 (2020)—this study argues that Foschini reinvents the giallo storico (historical thriller) by shifting the focus from forensic puzzle-solving to the excavation of collective trauma. His protagonists are not super-detectives but archivists, journalists, and forgotten witnesses. Ultimately, Foschini’s writing serves as a cartography of Campania’s submerged histories, where the crime is never merely individual but always political and social. 1. Introduction Andrea Foschini emerged in the Italian literary landscape in the late 2000s, following a career in investigative journalism. This background is crucial: his prose carries the weight of documented fact while deploying the narrative suspense of fiction. Unlike many Italian crime writers (e.g., Andrea Camilleri’s Montalbano or Maurizio de Giovanni’s Ricciardi), Foschini avoids serial protagonists. Instead, each novel builds a new epistemological lens through which to view Southern Italy’s unresolved past. The novel interweaves real historical figures (Major Norman