Introduction 1
1. New Approaches to John Fante's Ask the Dust
From the Particular to the Universal: Vittorini's Italian
Adaptation of Ask the Dust 15
Valerio Ferme
When Spirituality Ebbs and Flows: Religion and Diasporic
Alienation in Ask the Dust 43
Suzanne Manizza Roszak
"Sad Flower in the Sand": Camilla Lopez and the Erasure
of Memory in Ask the Dust 58
Meagan Meylor
"A Ramona in Reverse": Writing the Madness of the Spanish
Past in Ask the Dust 83
Daniel Gardner
2. Sibling Arts: Ask the Dust in Dance, Music,
the Graphic Novel, and French
Dancing with the Dust: Translating Ask the Dust to the Stage
111
J'aime Morrison
Ask the Lyrics: John Fante in Music 127
Chiara Mazzucchelli
Watch Out or You'll End up in My Novel: The Lost World
of Ask the Dust 145
Robert Guffey
Don't Ask the French 157
Philippe Garnier
3. Ask the Dust and Its Effects: Readers and Writers
Respond
Amid the Dust 167
Miriam Amico
The Passion That Became a Festival 177
Giovanna DiLello
I Had Bandini: Reading Ask the Dust in Prison 193
Joel Williams
Writing in the Dust 201
Alan Rifkin
How Hitler Nearly Destroyed the Great American Novel 213
Ryan Holiday
4. Ask the Dust and Its Due: Two Filmmakers and Bukowski Pay
Tribute
Interview with Robert Towne 237
Nathan Rabin
Letters from Los Angeles 245
Jan Louter
"My Dear Bukowski," "Hello John Fante": Preface to Ask the Dust
261
John Fante and Charles Bukowski
5. The Attic, the Archive, and Beyond
From Family to Institutional Memory: A Conversation
with Stephen Cooper 273
Teresa Fiore
Prelude to "Prologue to Ask the Dust" 281
Stephen Cooper
Goodbye, Bunker Hill 290
John Fante
The Road to John Fante's Los Angeles 296
Stephen Cooper
Acknowledgments 315
List of Contributors 319
Bibliography 325
Index 331
Stephen Cooper (Edited By)
Stephen Cooper is Professor of English, California State
University, Long Beach. He is the author of Full of Life: A
Biography of John Fante (Angel City Press, 2005).
Clorinda Donato (Edited By)
Clorinda Donato is the George L. Graziadio Chair of Italian Studies
at California State University, Long Beach. She co-wrote The
"Encyclopédie Méthodique" in Spain.
A decisive contribution to the critical understanding and
(re)assessment of John Fante's Ask the Dust, a novel that, while
appreciated by many, has never really made it into the canon. These
essays effectively demonstrate the theoretical and thematic
currency of the novel for today's critics and scholars, promising
to become a landmark in the landscape of Fante
scholarship.---Donatella Izzo, Università degli studi di Napoli
"L'Orientale"
John Fante's 'Ask the Dust' confirms the extent to which Fante's
work has influenced and inspired the work of so many others through
the decades and to this day. He does belong on the big bookshelf of
accomplished American authors, neatly tucked in before Faulkner and
followed by the likes of Fitzgerald and Frost.-- "Enthymema"
John Fante's Ask the Dust communicates the importance of the novel
by giving space to both scholarly essays and nonacademic
testimonies, which investigate the role the book has played in the
development of the authors here gathered. Rather than a thorough
work of academic inquiry, the present volume is therefore an homage
to the writer, as the editors themselves declare.-- "Iperstoria"
Ask a Question About this Product More... |