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The Priest's Hat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Priest's Hat
AuthorEmilio De Marchi
Original titleIl cappello del prete
TranslatorFrederick A. Y. Brown
LanguageItalian
Publication date
June 1887
Publication placeItaly
Published in English
1935

The Priest's Hat (Italian: Il cappello del prete) is an 1887 novel by the Italian writer Emilio De Marchi.

Background

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Emilio De Marchi wrote The Priest's Hat in a deliberate attempt to create a popular serial novel that was of high literary level and avoided obscene features De Marchi associated with French literature.[1]

Plot

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Inspired by a real murder case, The Priest's Hat is about an impoverished former playboy in Naples who plots to murder a greedy priest to be able to repay a loan.

Publication

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The story was serialised in June 1887 and published as a book in 1888.[2] It stood out with its ambitious marketing campaign, which included large posters depicting a mysterious hat that were placed all over Milan. It became a major bestseller in Italy.[1]

In 2003, the scholar Nicolas J. Perella called the novel "a nicely wrought 'mystery' structured in the fashion of the appendix novel but written without the crudeness of style and language that too often characterized that genre". He wrote that it is "written in a readily accessible, yet dignified manner, and with just enough psychological probing to add some depth to the story".[2]

Adaptations

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The novel was the basis for the 1944 film The Priest's Hat directed by Ferdinando Maria Poggioli[3] and the 1970 RAI TV serial Il cappello del prete [it] directed by Sandro Bolchi.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies: A-J. Taylor & Francis. 2007. p. 611. ISBN 9781579583903.
  2. ^ a b Perella, Nicolas J. (2003). "Popular fiction between Unification and World War I". The Cambridge Companion to the Italian Novel. Cambridge University Press. p. 88. ISBN 9780521669627.
  3. ^ Peter Bondanella & Federico Pacchioni. A History of Italian Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017. p. 54
  4. ^ Vurti, Roberto (2022). Italian Giallo in Film and Television: A Critical History. McFarland. p. 336. ISBN 9781476682488.
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