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A01=Christopher McGrath
Agnelli
Alps
Author_Christopher McGrath
Calvino
Carlo Levi
Category=NHD
Category=WTL
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_travel
Fiat
forthcoming
Ginzburg
Italy
Juventus
Mussolini
Pavese
Piedmont
Po
Primo Levi
Risorgimento
Savoy
Superga
Torino
Turin

Product details

  • ISBN 9781914982200
  • Dimensions: 135 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Haus Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Unknown to most foreigners, as they follow each other around Florence and Siena, Rome and Venice, the Italy they see today is the result of a second renaissance. And its seat was a city they need to discover, in all its enigmatic allure, if they are truly to understand the nation it brought into being. As Umberto Eco says: ‘Without Italy, Turin would have been more or less the same. But without Turin, Italy would have been very different.’ This baroque jewel at the foot of the Alps provides a unique prism on the story of modern Italy: not just as a founding capital, but also in kindling a political, cultural, and economic regeneration after the tragedies of dictatorship and civil war.

Their emergence as a dynamo of national industrialisation, symbolised by Fiat, had made the factories of Turin the original seat of both Italian capitalism and socialism; and accordingly, the heart of resistance to Mussolini. After the Second World War, the city drove parallel revivals. On the one hand, Fiat proved a foundation stone for Italy’s famous ‘economic miracle’; on the other, the Einaudi publishing house became a platform for the greatest local flowering of Italian culture since the days of the Medicis, not least through several of its own employees, including Natalia Ginzburg, Cesare Pavese, and Italo Calvino. These competing energies were personified by the respective enigmas who presided over these agencies of renewal, Gianni Agnelli and Giulio Einaudi.

But their rivalry also only demonstrated the polarities that have long defined this royal city of arcaded streets and squares, with its wild mountain backdrop. That contrast is expressed even by the city’s rival football teams: the seigneurial Juventus, long bankrolled by the Agnelli family, its perennial success toasted throughout the peninsula; and Torino, the fallen giants whose tragic legacy commands the underdog fidelity of local nostalgics, workers, and rebels.

Exploring the contribution of Turin to modern Italy, Chris McGrath entwines some of the nation’s most celebrated names with less familiar citizens who illuminate the gaps: from the forgotten poet who bears exquisite witness to the city’s crepuscular atmosphere at the turn of the last century, to the Torino footballer who fought with the partisans before becoming a star of neorealist cinema.

Risorgimento, resistance, reconstruction: none of these decisive phases in Italy’s modern evolution would have been the same without this unsung city.

Award-winning journalist Chris McGrath’s previous book, Mr Darley's Arabian: High Life, Low Life, Sporting Life: A History of Racing in Twenty-Five Horses (John Murray, 2016), was shortlisted for the prestigious William Hill Sports Book of the Year. McGrath’s lifelong travels in Italy, mostly in Piedmont, amount to a number of years.

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