Set during the first half of the twentieth century, this is the story of
the Brunis, a family of farmers from the Italian Padan Plain who have
worked the land since time immemorial. And it is a story about the
homeless multitudes, travelers, and tinkers, roaming Europe during the
hardscrabble nineteen-twenties and thirties. In this expansive novel,
reminiscent of Bertolucci's masterpiece 1900 in its scope and subject
matter, these two worlds meet when the Brunis open their great barn and
offer it as a refuge for those in need of a warm, dry, and safe place to
sleep and eat.
The barn becomes font and inspiration for a series of vivid stories
involving sundry strangers, the Bruni parents themselves, and their nine
children--seven boys and two girls--who will grow into young men and
women during World War I and its aftermath. Told in the tradition of
country folktales and framed by the devastating years of strife--two
world wars and the years of fascism--these stories will delight readers
from the first page to the last. Manfredi's A Winter's Night provides
a timely reminder that simple values and a sense of solidarity with our
fellow human beings remain of vital importance, above all in a world
undergoing momentous and rapid change.