A Tranquil Star

A Tranquil Star  

First edition cover - published by Penguin Classics.
Author(s) Primo Levi
Original title Vizio di forma and Storie naturali
Translator Ann Goldstein and Alessandra Bastagli
Country United Kingdom
Publisher Penguin
Publication date 2007
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 164 pp
ISBN 978-0-713-99955-6
OCLC Number 76798314

A Tranquil Star: Unpublished Stories of Primo Levi is a 2007 anthology of short stories by the Italian writer Primo Levi. Released 20 years after Levi's death, the book consists of seventeen stories previously unpublished in English. The stories were translated by Ann Goldstein, an editor at The New Yorker and Alessandra Bastagli, an editor at Palgrave/Macmillan.

Contents

A captured Italian partisan sits in the back of a truck with other prisoners and German guards. Slowly he realises that he is going to be tortured and killed and so he decides to fight back. He works out a plan to take a grenade from one of the guards and explode it, killing himself and some of the guards, but will he succeed?

Bear meat is "the taste of being strong and free".A group of mountaineers swap stories about their adventures, all of which involve a mistake - a central part of being free and living life to the full.

Censors are suffering from strange and incurable diseases due to their work. A solution has to be found. Animals are trained to do the work. Chickens seem to be the best censors.

A device made from metal, about the same size as a cigar. It is lethal, but only from a range of less than a meter. They can only be used once and everyone carries them. Strangers now keep their distance from one another, everyone is fearful. But as no blood is spilt in their use they are not used to kill very often.

The Park is where characters from novels live. There are many detectives, soldiers and prostitutes, but few plumbers. Here they eat, drink and chat and pass the time of day.

Paint it with magic paint and it thrives, is protected, even lucky. Di Prima is painted in it from head to toe. His girlfriend makes up with him, traffic lights turn to green on his approach, he even wins a small lottery prize. The chemist isolates the active ingredient, Tantalum! They experiment by using the paint to counteract Fassio's evil eye with terrible consequences.

Fighters with hammers take on drivers in medium sized cars. The fight is exciting but distasteful.

Pasquale writes a poem, but he keeps losing it. But it has grown tiny feet and moves on its own. He cannot copy it, he glues it down, the paper disintegrates, the poem is lost. Can Pasquale rewrite it?

A train is overwhelmed by a mass of leaves and grinds to a halt one evening. Overnight a tribe of dwarves dismantles the train and the tracks. By morning nothing is left.

A memoir of Levi's week-ends drilling with his rifle in the MVSN.

Two modern men are in the jungle studying the Sirioni Indians. A fire wrecks their camp and they lose all their technology. Now they have no tricks the Indians see them as helpless burdens. Their culture leads them to kill the burdensome. Will they survive ?

In an office a clerk receives cards every day on his desk stating the future date of death of individual citizens. His job is to assign a cause of death. A man is to die of liver failure, a woman in a car crash. But then he has to give a cause of death for a young child. He cannot. He requests a transfer.

Umberto reads about a fascinating woman in the memoir of an English soldier. He recognises the name and remembers seeing it on the wall of a house by the sea. He introduces himself to the woman. Is she the woman in the book? Is the story true?

A kangaroo goes to a party...

Aliens watch TV broadcasts from Earth. Their favourite transmission is a commercial for tomato puree. They write to the broadcaster...

A batch of paint goes horribly wrong. A retelling of a true story from Levi's time at the paint factory.

A star explodes. It is a tiny speck on a photographic plate at an observatory, but for those involved its magnitude cannot be described by language.