In Under All the Rain in the World, ordinary men and women, kings, emperors, children, translators, artists and vagabonds meet. Fixed to a memory and unable to forget, the characters in these magnificent stories show that the basic condition of the human being, thrown by God on this earth, is loneliness.
A wall is the physical limit that separates and at the same time protects from the outside, from reality; also, a fictitious window that promises a contact with the outside. In these stories filled with emptiness, isolation, muffled screams, out in the open, remnants appear, fragments of other people's lives, often alienated from reality. They are the splinters of an incessant and vertiginous search for interiority that perhaps facilitates insertion into an incomprehensible, suffering world full of limitations.
The hand extended to the other, the need for correspondence an...read more