Alberto Savinio (Andrea de Chirico) represents one of the luckiest expressions of Surrealism. Savinio says that one day in 1937, in Paris, André Breton gave him to read a writing of his saying that both he and his brother, the painter Giorgio de Chirico, were two of the most important expressions of that strange art called Surrealism. Flattering words those of Breton, but which could confuse the readers of this peculiar Italian writer. In any case, Savinio's surrealism follows its own channels: "My surrealism," Savinio says, "as many of my writings and paintings testify, he is not content to represent the report and to squeeze the unconscious, but to shape the report and conscience of the unconscious." With these stories, Alberto Savinio shows us one of the most original forms of surrealism.