If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler: a book to experience

Italo Calvino takes you on a meta journey of finding his story within his story

By: Maxwell Gawlick

You pick up a new novel, but the pages are out of order. You pick up a new copy, containing only the first chapter, but that chapter makes you desperate for the next. You search for the next chapter and wind up on an adventure to uncover the scattered tale. This is the idea behind Italo Calvino’s If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler.

     Set in the fictional country of Cimmeria between World War I and II, Calvino’s novel is a surreal adventure with a frame-story style that always keeps the story fresh. It’s split into two alternating perspectives. The first follows “you,” the reader, and your search to find the next chapters of the mysterious book If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler. You soon meet the source of the second perspective: another “you,” a woman, who is another reader with the same goal as you. Together you pursue the inescapable story. The other sections explore these chapters themselves, but each chapter is the beginning of a new tale, unrelated to the last. Each chapter ends unresolved, and you constantly yearn for answers.

     Calvino’s writing is descriptive and detailed, but its fluidity prevents it from becoming flowery. The characters feel real, and it’s all too easy to get lost in them and feel like you’re experiencing the adventure yourself. The writing is easy to get into, but it becomes increasingly complex as you read between the lines. It’s the sort of book you lie awake at night considering. It’s impossible to forget, and less a book to read than to experience. Experience it.

Was this article helpful?

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Block title

CUPE Local 15 alleges Vancouver bargained in bad faith

By: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik, News Writer A local union is alleging that the City of Vancouver did not bargain in good faith during agreements that were settled in August of last year. Instead, they claim, “the City violated the Labour Relations Code by “Intentionally withholding important information about its plans to implement far-reaching workforce reductions until after bargaining had concluded and the collective agreement had been ratified.” — Santino Scardillo, CUPE Local 15 acting president “CUPE Local 15, which represents more than 4,000 employees with the City, Park Board, and community centres,” believes that Vancouver was aware of the possibility of upcoming layoffs “as early as June 2025.”  This summer, mayor Ken Sim called for a 0% property tax increase, despite notes from city staff that a...

Read Next

Block title

CUPE Local 15 alleges Vancouver bargained in bad faith

By: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik, News Writer A local union is alleging that the City of Vancouver did not bargain in good faith during agreements that were settled in August of last year. Instead, they claim, “the City violated the Labour Relations Code by “Intentionally withholding important information about its plans to implement far-reaching workforce reductions until after bargaining had concluded and the collective agreement had been ratified.” — Santino Scardillo, CUPE Local 15 acting president “CUPE Local 15, which represents more than 4,000 employees with the City, Park Board, and community centres,” believes that Vancouver was aware of the possibility of upcoming layoffs “as early as June 2025.”  This summer, mayor Ken Sim called for a 0% property tax increase, despite notes from city staff that a...

Block title

CUPE Local 15 alleges Vancouver bargained in bad faith

By: Lucaiah Smith-Miodownik, News Writer A local union is alleging that the City of Vancouver did not bargain in good faith during agreements that were settled in August of last year. Instead, they claim, “the City violated the Labour Relations Code by “Intentionally withholding important information about its plans to implement far-reaching workforce reductions until after bargaining had concluded and the collective agreement had been ratified.” — Santino Scardillo, CUPE Local 15 acting president “CUPE Local 15, which represents more than 4,000 employees with the City, Park Board, and community centres,” believes that Vancouver was aware of the possibility of upcoming layoffs “as early as June 2025.”  This summer, mayor Ken Sim called for a 0% property tax increase, despite notes from city staff that a...
Exit mobile version