Grazia Deledda

Grazia Deledda, (b. Sept.
27, 1871, Nuoro, Sardinia, Italy—d. Aug. 15, 1936, Rome),
novelist who was influenced by the verismo (“realism”)
school in Italian literature. She was awarded the Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1926.
Deledda married very young
and moved to Rome, where she lived quietly, frequently
visiting her native Sardinia. With little formal schooling,
at age 17 Deledda wrote her first stories, based on
sentimental treatment of folklore themes. With Il vecchio
della montagna (1900; “The Old Man of the Mountain”) she
began to write about the tragic effects of temptation and
sin among primitive human beings.
Among her most notable
works are Dopo il divorzio (1902; After the Divorce); Elias
Portolu (1903), the story of a mystical former convict in
love with his brother’s bride; Cenere (1904; Ashes; film,
1916, starring Eleonora Duse), in which an illegitimate son
causes his mother’s suicide; and La madre (1920; The Woman
and the Priest; U.S. title, The Mother), the tragedy of a
mother who realizes her dream of her son’s becoming a priest
only to see him yield to the temptations of the flesh. In
these and others of her more than 40 novels, Deledda often
used Sardinia’s landscape as a metaphor for the difficulties
in her characters’ lives. The ancient ways of Sardinia often
conflict with modern mores, and her characters are forced to
work out solutions to their moral issues. Cosima, an
autobiographical novel, was published posthumously in 1937.