The Novel of Ferrara

Reading Level
Grade 10
Time to Read
20 hrs 13 mins

Reading Level

What is the reading level of The Novel of Ferrara?

Analysing the books in the series, we estimate that the reading level of The Novel of Ferrara is 9th and 10th grade.

Expert Readability Tests for
The Novel of Ferrara

Readability Test Reading Level
Flesch Kincaid Scale Grade 9
SMOG Index Grade 10
Coleman Liau Index Grade 8
Dale Chall Readability Score Grade 6

Reading Time

20 hrs 13 mins

How long to read The Novel of Ferrara?

The estimated word count of The Novel of Ferrara is 303,025 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 20 hrs 13 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 33 hrs 41 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 11 hrs 14 mins.

The Novel of Ferrara - 303,025 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 33 hrs 41 mins
Average 250 words/min 20 hrs 13 mins
Fast 450 words/min 11 hrs 14 mins
The Novel of Ferrara by Giorgio Bassani
Authors
Giorgio Bassani

More about The Novel of Ferrara

303,025 words

Word Count

for The Novel of Ferrara

800 pages

Pages
Hardcover: 800 pages
Paperback: 768 pages
Kindle: 848 pages

32 hours and 35 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

Giorgio Bassani’s six classic books, collected for the first time in English as the epic masterwork they were intended to be.Among the masters of twentieth-century literature, Giorgio Bassani and his Northern Italian hometown of Ferrara “are as inseparable as James Joyce and Dublin or Italo Svevo and Trieste” (from the Introduction). Now published in English for the first time as the unified masterwork Bassani intended, The Novel of Ferrara brings together Bassani’s six classics, fully revised by the author at the end of his life: Within the Walls, The Gold-Rimmed Spectacles, The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, Behind the Door, The Heron, and The Smell of Hay.Set in the northern Italian town of Ferrara before, during, and after the Second World War, these interlocking stories present a fully rounded world of unforgettable characters: the respected doctor whose homosexuality is tolerated until he is humiliatingly exposed by an exploitative youth; a survivor of the Nazi death camps whose neighbors’ celebration of his return gradually turns to ostracism; a young man discovering the ugly, treacherous price that people will pay for a sense of belonging; the Jewish aristocrat whose social position has been erased; the indomitable schoolteacher, Celia Trotti, whose Communist idealism disturbs and challenges a postwar generation.The Novel of Ferrara memorializes not only the Ferrarese people, but the city itself, which assumes a character and a voice deeply inflected by the Jewish community to which the narrator belongs. Suffused with new life by acclaimed translator and poet Jamie McKendrick, this seminal work seals Bassani’s reputation as “a quietly insistent chronicler of our age’s various menaces to liberty” (Jonathan Keates).