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sabato 30 gennaio 2021

L'Oréal Paris MakeUp Mascara Volumizzante e Incurvante Bambi Eye Oversized, Nero, 8.9 ml

Listerine. Trasforma la tua igiene orale in 21 giorni

Colgate ... il sorriso è la nostra forza!

BLISS - "YOU AND I" by Will Bates featuring Skye Edwards | Prime Video

4 Ways To Watch Janelle Monae | Prime Video

The Longest Name In The World | Dhamaal | Arshad Warsi, Javed Jaffrey | ...

Best of Aladeen | The Dictator | Sacha Baron Cohen | Amazon Prime Video

Pro Loco Valmontone

Pro Loco Valmontone

Fashion Hotel Valmontone | Sito Ufficiale

Fashion Hotel Valmontone | Sito Ufficiale

Valmontone - Wikipedia

Valmontone - Wikipedia

Comune di Valmontone

Comune di Valmontone

Soldati di sventura. Nella legione straniera dall’Alto Adige a Vietnam. Lʼinferno a 10mila chilometri da casa di Luca Fregona (Athesia)

 

 

Tre uomini e un destino: Dien Bien Phu, la battaglia di 56 giorni che il 7 maggio 1954 segna la sconfitta della Francia, il trionfo di Ho Chi Min nella guerra di Indocina, e il crollo del colonialismo europeo in estremo Oriente. Quando si parla del Vietnam, viene in mente in automatico l'intervento americano degli anni Sessanta nel sud del paese. Ma prima, altrettanto devastante, spietata e orribile, c'è stata la guerra nel nord tra la Francia e il Vietminh, l'esercito di liberazione del Vietnam guidato dal generale Giap. In Indocina, dal 1946 al 1954, hanno combattuto oltre 5000 italiani inquadrati nella legione straniera. Più di mille sono morti in combattimento o nei campi di prigionia viet. Una generazione uscita a pezzi dalla seconda guerra mondiale, caduta nel "tritacarne" della Legione, ultimo approdo di chi non conosceva più il significato della parola "futuro". Ex fascisti, ex partigiani, clandestini arrestati in Francia e poi costretti ad arruolarsi, giovani alla fame senza la prospettiva di un lavoro. Il libro racconta la storia di tre ventenni altoatesini, partiti "volontari" per motivi diversi, che, senza conoscersi l'uno con l'altro, hanno visto le loro vite affondare nel fango "in-mezzo-al-nulla" di Dien Bien Phu, a diecimila chilometri da casa, in una guerra che non gli apparteneva, circondati dalla giungla ostile. "Prigionieri" di una valle spoglia, martellata dall'assedio feroce dei viet. Per capire cosa li ha spinti in questo viaggio all'inferno, bisogna però conoscere anche la loro vita "prima". I drammi e la solitudine che gli hanno fatto credere di non avere più buone carte in mano e nessun altro posto al mondo dove andare. Sono le storie di Beniamino Leoni, che ha disertato e combattuto nel Vietminh contro i suoi ex compagni. Di Emil Stocker, sopravvissuto per caso al massacro insieme al suo straordinario reportage di 1036 foto che racconta i suoi quattro anni di Vietnam. E di Rudi Altadonna, ucciso e poi sepolto nella terra rossa di Dien Bien Phu.

La casa del male di Annalisa Strada e Gianluigi Spini (DeA)

 

 

 

Arturo ha quindici anni e un pensiero fisso in testa: dichiararsi a Liliana, la ragazza della porta accanto. Col pensiero di Liliana, Arturo non fa quasi più caso all’atmosfera cupa che si respira nelle vie di Milano. Del resto, è abituato alla guerra, agli aerei che sganciano i loro carichi mortali, alle cattive notizie dal fronte e alle estenuanti file per un tozzo di pane da dividere con la mamma e la sorella. Per Arturo questa è la normalità, e tenere un basso profilo è l’unico modo che ha per sopravvivere, a dispetto di quel che pensano i suoi amici: il ribelle Luciano, invischiato in ambienti antifascisti, e lo sprezzante Vittorio, camerata convinto. Arturo guarda Liliana e non vede nient’altro. Non vede la morte, non vede le torture, non vede la Villa Triste di via Paolo Uccello. Una casa in cui coloro che entrano difficilmente possono raccontarlo. Nella Milano di Arturo e Liliana, a volte, basta una parola, o un pensiero pronunciato ad alta voce per finire inghiottiti dalla casa, e lì, nemmeno tutto il coraggio del mondo può salvarti. Ma a quindici anni non ci si arrende, si è pronti a giocare la partita, anche se in palio c’è una vita. Con questo romanzo, Annalisa Strada e Gianluigi Spini portano alla luce uno degli episodi più crudi e terribili della Seconda guerra mondiale. Arturo e Liliana non sono realmente esistiti, ma i loro nomi racchiudono la storia di migliaia di giovani che, come loro, hanno vissuto l’orrore delle Ville Tristi sorte sul territorio italiano durante il conflitto.

“Villa Triste” era una canzone d’amore un po’ strappalacrime che ebbe un grande successo all’inizio degli anni ’40. Poi arrivarono i mesi drammatici dell’occupazione nazista e quel nome — certe volte le parole seguono percorsi inaspettati — passò a indicare quei centri di tortura gestiti dai fascisti dove, per far confessare i partigiani arrestati, si consumarono con ferocia atrocità e torture di ogni genere. Una pagina poco nota e quasi dimenticata della nostra storia recente. La casa del male è un romanzo limpido e intenso che si legge con emozione crescente. - Walter Fochesato, Andersen

La moda fra senso e cambiamento. Teorie, oggetti, spazi di Isabella Pezzini e Bianca Terracciano (Meltemi)

 

 

 

Ambizione di questa antologia è indicare, rappresentare e interpretare ogni ambito della semiotica della moda, proponendosi come un manuale agile sia per studenti sia per appassionati della materia. I testi raccolti sono organizzati in tre sezioni – teorie, oggetti e spazi – che indicano i percorsi principali della disciplina e le sue applicazioni pratiche. Si comincia dalle questioni legate alla moda come fenomeno culturale e semiotico per poi procedere con l'articolazione delle relazioni tra oggetti e spazi, da indagare mediante un'accurata metodologia e griglie d'analisi. Negli oggetti e negli spazi il discorso di moda si innesta con quello di marca, generando una peculiare costellazione di senso in varie forme: capi, accessori, spazi fisici e digitali, performance artistiche e d'intrattenimento. Non solo comunicazione, consumi e marketing, ma anche creolizzazione valoriale con l'heritage e l'arte, in cui la moda ha il compito di dare corpo e identità a vere e proprie forme di vita.

Il guardiano di Peter Terrin e Claudia Cozzi (Iperborea)

 

 

 

Harry e Michel, in servizio nel garage sotterraneo di un lussuoso condominio, scandiscono giornate sempre uguali tra turni di guardia e giri d'ispezione finché qualcosa di insolito spezza la loro routine: improvvisamente tutti i residenti ― tranne uno ― lasciano il palazzo in gran fretta. Sicuramente in città è successo qualcosa di terribile, forse un'esplosione nucleare, forse un virus, forse addirittura una guerra; ma Harry e Michel non possono saperlo, perché dall'esterno, al di là del blindatissimo cancello d'ingresso che non possono varcare, non arriva nessun rumore. Fuori, un mondo indecifrabile, un «deserto dei Tartari» muto e inquietante; dentro, una fortezza inespugnabile dove Harry e Michel, ligi al dovere, non possono che aspettare gli ordini dell'onnipotente Organizzazione da cui dipendono, ma che sembra essersi dimenticata di loro. Con divertita ironia, Peter Terrin tratteggia i tic dei due protagonisti nella semioscurità claustrofobica del seminterrato deserto: il veterano Harry, così compreso nel suo ruolo da vedere il pericolo anche nell'arrivo del furgone delle provviste, e lo spaesato Michel, maniaco dell'ordine e della pulizia, che fa il bucato, cuoce il pane ed è più attento allo sgocciolio dello sciacquone che al pericolo di un attacco esterno. Come Vladimiro ed Estragone, Harry e Michel aspettano il loro Godot, ma quando finalmente qualcosa succede, con l'arrivo di un terzo guardiano, la paranoia di Harry prende il sopravvento e la situazione precipita. In un crescendo di suspense, Michel si ritrova coinvolto, e i lettori con lui, in una spirale di eventi che mettono a nudo la fragilità di un uomo lasciato solo a decidere il proprio destino quando tutto intorno è incomprensibile.

Figlio mio, figlio mio di Howard Spring (Corbaccio)

 

 

William Essex cresce negli slums di Manchester e riesce a sfuggire a un destino di miseria grazie a un benefattore che ne intuisce il talento letterario. Il suo migliore amico è Dermot O'Riordan falegname irlandese e sostenitore della causa repubblicana. William e Dermot seguono strade parallele ed entrambi riescono a realizzare i propri sogni: William si afferma come scrittore mentre Dermot diventa un industriale di successo. Si sposano entrambi e hanno due figli maschi nati nello stesso giorno: Oliver e Rory. E su di loro investono tutte le speranze che i padri investono sui figli. «Vorrei realizzare per mio figlio ciò che ho mancato io. Voglio che abbia tutto! Voglio dargli una vita splendida!». Ma la vita, quella vita evocata, deciderà diversamente. I progetti che i due amici fanno sui loro figli non andranno esattamente come avevano sognato una sera, al «fumo delle pipe, gli occhi velati dalle incerte nebbie del futuro». Oliver e Rory cresceranno ma, contro le aspettative paterne, non perpetueranno l'amicizia tra le due famiglie, anzi, per ragioni sentimentali, si ritroveranno acerrimi nemici, mentre sul loro destino e quello dei loro genitori, si stende l'ombra tragica della Grande Guerra. Narrata da William, questa storia di genitori e figli, amici e rivali, ragazzi e soldati, è incalzante come le canzoni popolari, la rivista, i canti tradizionali che accompagnavano i giovani in guerra e che battono il tempo facendo da sfondo e restituendo il sapore di un'epoca intera. Howard Spring, romanziere oggi ingiustamente dimenticato, si fece conoscere al mondo intero proprio con questo romanzo, pubblicato nel 1938 (e uscito in Italia nel 1940 grazie all'intuito di Gian Dauli, direttore della collana degli "Scrittori di tutto il mondo") che ne mette in risalto la capacità di costruire trame complesse e appassionanti con un ritmo narrativo capace però di sciogliersi in un largo adagio quando descrive i paesaggi che assistono imperturbabili, nei loro cicli vitali, al muoversi dei tanti personaggi che affrontano la vita in modi così diversi.

Star Wars: Light of the Jedi (The High Republic) by Charles Soule (Random House)

 

 

#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Long before the First Order, before the Empire, before even The Phantom Menace . . . Jedi lit the way for the galaxy in The High Republic

It is a golden age. Intrepid hyperspace scouts expand the reach of the Republic to the furthest stars, worlds flourish under the benevolent leadership of the Senate, and peace reigns, enforced by the wisdom and strength of the renowned order of Force users known as the Jedi. With the Jedi at the height of their power, the free citizens of the galaxy are confident in their ability to weather any storm But the even brightest light can cast a shadow, and some storms defy any preparation.

When a shocking catastrophe in hyperspace tears a ship to pieces, the flurry of shrapnel emerging from the disaster threatens an entire system. No sooner does the call for help go out than the Jedi race to the scene. The scope of the emergence, however, is enough to push even Jedi to their limit. As the sky breaks open and destruction rains down upon the peaceful alliance they helped to build, the Jedi must trust in the Force to see them through a day in which a single mistake could cost billions of lives.

Even as the Jedi battle valiantly against calamity, something truly deadly grows beyond the boundary of the Republic. The hyperspace disaster is far more sinister than the Jedi could ever suspect. A threat hides in the darkness, far from the light of the age, and harbors a secret that could strike fear into even a Jedi’s heart.

Neighbors A Novel by Danielle Steel (Random House)

 

 

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • In Danielle Steel’s gripping new novel, a reclusive woman opens up her home to her neighbors in the wake of a devastating earthquake, setting off events that reveal secrets, break relationships apart, and bring strangers together to forge powerful new bonds.

Meredith White was one of Hollywood’s most recognizable faces. But a personal tragedy cut her acting career short and alienated her from her family. For the last fifteen years, Meredith has been living alone in San Francisco with two trusted caretakers. Then, on a muggy late summer day, a massive earthquake strikes Northern California, plunging the Bay Area into chaos. Without a moment’s hesitation, Meredith invites her stunned and shaken neighbors into her mostly undamaged home as the recovery begins.

These people did not even realize that movie star Meredith White was living on their street. Now, they are sharing her mansion, as well as their most closely kept secrets. Without the walls and privacy of their own homes, one by one, new relationships are forged. For every neighbor there is a story, from the doctor whose wife and children fear him, to the beautiful young woman dating a dishonorable man, to the aspiring writer caring for a famous blind musician.

In the heart of the crisis, Meredith finds herself venturing back into the world. And thanks to the suspicions and the dogged detective work of a disaster relief volunteer, a former military officer named Charles, a shocking truth about her own world is exposed. Suddenly Meredith sees her isolation, her estranged family, and even her acting career in a whole new light.

Filled with powerful human dramas, Neighbors is a penetrating look at how our world can be upended in a moment. In a novel of unforgettable characters and stunning twists, acts of love and courage become the most powerful forces of all.

Devolution A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre by Max Brooks (Random House)

 

 

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The #1 New York Times bestselling author of World War Z is back with “the Bigfoot thriller you didn’t know you needed in your life, and one of the greatest horror novels I’ve ever read” (Blake Crouch, author of Dark Matter and Recursion).
 
As the ash and chaos from Mount Rainier’s eruption swirled and finally settled, the story of the Greenloop massacre has passed unnoticed, unexamined . . . until now. The journals of resident Kate Holland, recovered from the town’s bloody wreckage, capture a tale too harrowing—and too earth-shattering in its implications—to be forgotten. In these pages, Max Brooks brings Kate’s extraordinary account to light for the first time, faithfully reproducing her words alongside his own extensive investigations into the massacre and the legendary beasts behind it. Kate’s is a tale of unexpected strength and resilience, of humanity’s defiance in the face of a terrible predator’s gaze, and, inevitably, of savagery and death.

Yet it is also far more than that.

Because if what Kate Holland saw in those days is real, then we must accept the impossible. We must accept that the creature known as Bigfoot walks among us—and that it is a beast of terrible strength and ferocity.

Part survival narrative, part bloody horror tale, part scientific journey into the boundaries between truth and fiction, this is a Bigfoot story as only Max Brooks could chronicle it—and like none you’ve ever read before.

Praise for Devolution

“Delightful . . . [A] tale of supernatural mayhem that fans of King and Crichton alike will enjoy.”Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“The story is told in such a compelling manner that horror fans will want to believe and, perhaps, take the warning to heart.”Booklist (starred review)

 

Minecraft: The Crash An Official Minecraft Novel by Tracey Baptiste (Random House)

 

 

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • This official Minecraft novel is an action-packed thriller! When a new virtual-reality version of the game brings her dreams—and doubts—to life, one player must face her fears.

Bianca has never been good at following the plan. She’s more of an act-now, deal-with-the-consequences-later kind of person. But consequences can’t be put off forever, as Bianca learns when she and her best friend, Lonnie, are in a terrible car crash.

Waking up in the hospital, almost paralyzed by her injuries, Bianca is faced with questions she’s not equipped to answer. She chooses instead to try a new virtual-reality version of Minecraft that responds to her every wish, giving her control over a world at the very moment she thought she’d lost it. As she explores this new realm, she encounters a mute, glitching avatar she believes to be Lonnie. Bianca teams up with Esme and Anton, two kids who are also playing on the hospital server, to save her friend.

But the road to recovery isn’t without its own dangers. The kids are swarmed by mobs seemingly generated by their fears and insecurities, and now Bianca must deal with the uncertainties that have been plaguing her: Is Lonnie really in the game? And can Bianca help him return to reality?

Collect all of the official Minecraft books:
Minecraft: The Island
Minecraft: The Crash
Minecraft: The Lost Journals

Minecraft: The Survivors’ Book of Secrets
Minecraft: Exploded Builds: Medieval Fortress
Minecraft: Guide to Exploration
Minecraft: Guide to Creative
Minecraft: Guide to the Nether & the End
Minecraft: Guide to Redstone
Minecraft: Mobestiary
Minecraft: Guide to Enchantments & Potions
Minecraft: Guide to PVP Minigames
Minecraft: Guide to Farming
Minecraft: Let’s Build! Theme Park Adventure
Minecraft for Beginners

 

Call Sign Chaos Learning to Lead by Jim Mattis and Bing West (Random House)

 

 

In late November 2016, I was enjoying Thanksgiving break in my hometown on the Columbia River in Washington State when I received an unexpected call from Vice President–elect Pence. Would I meet with President-elect Trump to discuss the job of Secretary of Defense of the United States? I had taken no part in the election campaign and had never met or spoken to Mr. Trump, so to say that I was surprised is an understatement. Further, I knew that, absent a congressional waiver, federal law prohibited a former military officer from serving as Secretary of Defense within seven years of departing military service. Given that no waiver had been authorized since General George Marshall was made secretary in 1950, and I’d been out for only three and a half years, I doubted I was a viable candidate. Nonetheless, I flew to Bedminster, New Jersey, for the interview.

I had time on the cross-country flight to ponder how to encapsulate my view of America’s role in the world. On my flight out of Denver, the flight attendant’s standard safety briefing caught my attention: If cabin pressure is lost, masks will drop. . . . Put your own mask on first, then help others around you. . . . We’ve all heard it many times, but in that moment, these familiar words seemed like a metaphor: to preserve our leadership role, we needed to get our own country’s act together first, especially if we were to help others.

The next day I was driven to the Trump National Golf Club and, entering a side door, waited about twenty minutes before I was ushered into a modest conference room. I was introduced to the President-elect, the Vice President–elect, the chief of staff, and a handful of others. We talked about the state of our military, where our views aligned and where they differed. In our forty-minute conversation, Mr. Trump led the wide-ranging discussion, and the tone was amiable. Afterward, the President-elect escorted me out to the front steps of the colonnaded clubhouse, where the press was gathered. I assumed that I would be on my way back to Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, where I’d spent the past few years doing research and guest lecturing around the country, and was greatly enjoying my time. I figured that my strong support of NATO and my dismissal of the use of torture on prisoners would have the President-elect looking for another candidate. Standing beside him on the steps as photographers snapped away and shouted questions, I was surprised for the second time that week when he characterized me to the reporters as “the real deal.” Days later, I was formally nominated. That was when I realized that, subject to a congressional waiver and Senate consent, I would not be returning to Stanford’s beautiful, vibrant campus.

During the interview, Mr. Trump had asked me if I could do the job of Secretary of Defense. I said I could. I’d never aspired to the job, and took the opportunity to suggest several other candidates I thought highly capable of leading our defense. Still, having been raised by the Greatest Generation, by two parents who had served in World War II, and subsequently shaped by more than four decades in the Marine Corps, I considered government service to be both honor and duty. In my view, when the President asks you to do something, you don’t play Hamlet on the wall, wringing your hands. To quote a great American athletic company’s slogan, you “just do it.” So long as you are prepared, you say yes.

When it comes to the defense of our experiment in democracy and our way of life, ideology should have nothing to do with it. Whether asked to serve by a Democrat or a Republican, you serve. “Politics ends at the water’s edge.” This ethos has shaped and defined me, and I wasn’t going to betray it no matter how much I was enjoying my life west of the Rockies and spending time with a family I had neglected during my forty-plus years in the Marines.

When I said I could do the job, I meant I felt prepared. By happenstance, I knew the job intimately. In the late 1990s, I had served as the executive secretary to two Secretaries of Defense, William Perry and William Cohen. I had also served as the senior military assistant to Deputy Secretary of Defense Rudy de Leon. In close quarters, I had gained a personal grasp of the immensity and gravity of a “SecDef’s” responsibilities. The job is tough: our first Secretary of Defense committed suicide, and few have emerged from the job unscathed, either legally or politically.

We were at war, amid the longest continuous stretch of armed conflict in our nation’s history. I’d signed enough letters to next of kin about the death of a loved one to understand the consequential aspects of leading a department on a war footing when the rest of the country was not. Its millions of devoted troops and civilians spread around the world carried out their mission with a budget larger than the gross domestic products of all but two dozen nations. On a personal level, I had no great desire to return to Washington, D.C. I drew no energy from the turmoil and politics that animate our capital. Yet I didn’t feel inundated by the job’s immensities. I also felt confident that I could gain bipartisan support for Defense despite the political fratricide practiced in Washington.

In late December, I flew into Washington, D.C., to begin the Senate confirmation process.

This book is about how my career in the Marines brought me to this moment and prepared me to say yes to a job of this magnitude. The Marines teach you, above all, how to adapt, improvise, and overcome. But they expect you to have done your homework, to have mastered your profession. Amateur performance is anathema, and the Marines are bluntly critical of falling short, satisfied only with 100 percent effort and commitment. Yet over the course of my career, every time I made a mistake—and I made many—the Marines promoted me. They recognized that those mistakes were part of my tuition and a necessary bridge to learning how to do things right. Year in and year out, the Marines had trained me in skills they knew I needed, while educating me to deal with the unexpected.

Beneath its Prussian exterior of short haircuts, crisp uniforms, and exacting standards, the Corps nurtured some of the strangest mavericks and most original thinkers I would encounter in my journey through multiple commands, dozens of countries, and many college campuses. The Marines’ military excellence does not suffocate intellectual freedom or substitute regimented thinking for imaginative solutions. They know their doctrine, often derived from lessons learned in combat and written in blood, but refuse to let that turn into dogma. Woe to the unimaginative one who, in after-action reviews, takes refuge in doctrine. The critiques in the field, in the classroom, or at happy hour are blunt for good reason. Personal sensitivities are irrelevant. No effort is made to ease you through your midlife crisis when peers, seniors, or subordinates offer more cunning or historically proven options, even when out of step with doctrine.

In any organization, it’s all about selecting the right team. The two qualities I was taught to value most in selecting others for promotion or critical roles were initiative and aggressiveness. I looked for those hallmarks in those I served alongside. Institutions get the behaviors they reward. Marines have no institutional confusion about their mission: they are a ready naval force designed to fight well in any clime or place, then return to their own society as better citizens. That ethos has created a force feared by foes and embraced by allies the world over, because the Marines reward initiative aggressively implemented.

During my monthlong preparation for the Senate confirmation hearings, I read many excellent intelligence briefings. I was struck by the degree to which our competitive military edge was eroding, including our technological advantage. We would have to focus on regaining the edge. I had been fighting terrorism in the Middle East during my last decade of military service. During that time and in the three years since I had left active duty, haphazard funding had significantly worsened the situation, doing more damage to our current and future military readiness than any enemy in the field.

I could see that the background drummed into me as a Marine would need to be adapted to fit my role as a civilian secretary. The formulation of policy—from defining the main threats to our country to adapting the military’s education, budget, and selection of leaders to address the swiftly changing character of war—would place new demands on me. It now became even more clear to me why the Marines assign an expanded reading list to everyone promoted to a new rank: that reading gives historical depth that lights the path ahead. Slowly but surely, we learned there was nothing new under the sun: properly informed, we weren’t victims—we could always create options.

venerdì 29 gennaio 2021

Poesie di Maurizio Leo (I Quaderni del Bardo Edizioni di Stefano Donno)

Perlier ... ricette naturali per il tuo benessere!

Fabuloso

Rio Casamia

Sole piatti e lavatrice

Svelto ... il tuo amico per i piatti!

Tempo (fazzoletti, salviettine etc)

Nidra

Quel che stavamo cercando di Alessandro Baricco (Feltrinelli)

 

 

Ormai sappiamo che la pandemia di coronavirus è molto più di un'emergenza sanitaria. È come se sorgesse dall'universo delle paure che da tempo ormai detta la nostra agenda per soppiantarle tutte, e riscriverle. E se attraverso il mito gli umani generano il mondo, come ci insegna l'Iliade, allora la pandemia è una figura mitica, una costruzione collettiva. Che non significa che sia irreale o fantastica, anzi: si può dire che quasi tutte le scelte, di ogni tipo, fatte dagli umani negli ultimi cinquant'anni ne abbiano creato le condizioni. Così Alessandro Baricco prova a pensare la pandemia, in queste pagine lievi e dense, e ci invita, mentre salutiamo i morti, curiamo i malati e distanziamo i sani, mentre lo sguardo è fisso sul virus e i suoi movimenti, a chiudere gli occhi e metterci in ascolto di tutto il resto – come un rumore di fondo. Ci troveremo un misto di paura e audacia, di propensione al cambiamento e nostalgia per il passato, di dolcezza e cinismo, di meraviglia e orrore. Non perdiamo allora l'occasione per guardare dentro lo choc, per leggerci i movimenti che l'hanno generato e che ci definiscono come comunità. Se avremo il coraggio di affrontare la partita, una partita che ci aspettava da tempo, potremmo trovarci alcune sorprese, potremmo scoprire che questo deragliamento del corpo, personale e collettivo, è destinato a condurci in territori inesplorati, e che “chi ha amato, saprà”.

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