A brief review of Italo Calvino's first book


Posted at 12:00 on Feb 18th
By Duncan Barlow
I just finished reading The Path to the Nest of Spiders by Italo Calvino. This was Calvino’s first novel and is now my favorite by him. Calvino writes:

Perhaps, finally, your first book is the only one that matters. Perhaps a writer should write only that one. This is the one moment where you make the big leap; the opportunity to express yourself is offered that once, and you untie the knot within you then and never again. — June 1964 (Trans. William Weaver)

There is something to this statement. Although I am a fan of Calvino’s work, this book is a compelling book (through style and content) and seems to speak more to the essays on writing that he presented (published as a collection in the book Six Memos for the Next Millennium). Calvino writes:

After forty years of writing fiction…I have tried to remove weight, sometimes from people, sometimes from heavenly bodies, sometimes from cities; above all I have tried to remove weight from the structure of stories and from language (3).

This lightness is ever present in The Path to the Nest of Spiders. The cityscape and forests feel as if they are held up by chambers of air. He delicately crafts the avenues with precise detail and does not bog the reader down with needless or frivolous details. Calvino provides just enough description to propel the content. He does increase his descriptive language when the environment begins to crowd in upon the characters. Calvino uses this very effectively. For example, Calvino writes:

Pin now lives in a cubby-hold of a room, a sort of kennel beyond a wooden partition, with a high narrow slit of a window, cut sideways through the thick wall of the old house. Beyond it is his sister’s room, from which the light comes in streaks through the cracks in the partition, cracks which make Pin’s eyes squint with the effort to see what’s going on in the rest of the room. Pin has spent hours and hours at those cracks ever since he was a baby, and he’s trained his eyes to be like needle points; he knows everything that happens inside there, though the reasons for it all elude him. When, in the end, he curls up in his little bunk with his arms round his chest, the shadows of the tiny room transform themselves into strange dreams, of bodies chasing each other, hitting and embracing, till something big and hot and unknown happens which paralyses Pin and yet caresses and warms him too…(12)

This paragraph creates its own shadows. It blocks the page and the lines between the sentences become the thin slits of light in Pin’s room. Where most of the language in this book is composed of simple sentences and light words, this paragraph is heavy and suffocating with its long sentences and dark descriptions. Still, with all of its weight, it is still lighter than much of Calvino’s work. Let’s take for example, a paragraph from Calvino’s If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler, where he writes:

You have turned up here at a time when those hanging around publishing houses are no longer aspiring poets or novelists, as in the past, would-be poetesses or lady writers; this is the moment (in the history of Western culture) when self-realization on paper is sought not so much by isolated individuals as by collectives: study seminars, working parties, research teams, as if intellectual labor were too dismaying to be faced alone. (96).

One could argue that the language and weight of this sentence represents the sentiment of the claim, but there is something more to it. Although well crafted (as is much of Calvino’s work) it contains a certain weight that his earlier works did not. The Path to the Nest of Spiders has strength in its simplicity, its nakedness. Of course, having spent much of my research time on Franz Kafka, I am not one to shy away from long sentence and page saturating paragraphs. I cannot say that Calvino’s weight gain is less impressive than his younger slimmer self. I appreciate both. The Lack of weight in this book made it a much quicker read and allowed me to read it more casually, which I appreciated in a time of grading mid-terms and mailing out book orders.

Pin, the main character in Nest, is reminiscent of Günter Grass’ Oskar Matzerath (The Tin Drum). A child-like character who, even in his youngest years, possesses an adulterated view of the world. Pin, seeks the comfort of the adult world. He repeats crass jokes, tells dirty secrets about people in his neighborhood, and spends his time in a local bar while his prostitute sister works. He longs for acceptance in the adult world because the neighborhood children flee ostracize him because he is a mouthy tramp. His is a world of rejection and abuse. He eventually steals a gun from a German soldier and falls in with a resistance group, where he finds a home with an unlikely hit man. It’s a heartbreaking, but inspiring story of loss and redemption, filtered mainly through the eyes of a child. There is one moment, however, where the book comes apart. It’s a sudden switch in point of view. Where most of the time the reader follows the world as Pin is exposed to it, one chapter strays and follows two resistance fighters as they walk through the forest. It is, as far as I see it, the only weak link in this otherwise tight and compelling story.
Brief Review of Italo Calvino The Path to the Nest of Spiders

Featured Books


Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan By Keith Abbott

In Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan, Keith Abbott paints a portrait of Richard Brautigan as a lovable and whimsical friend. Abbott explains the writer’s dedication to the art of fiction and his quest to break beyond the pop culture, hippie label that haunted him until his suicide in 1984. Brautigan’s tight prose inspired authors such as Haruki Murakami and his experimentation with the line won him accolades from authors like Ishmael Reed, Raymond Carver, and Michael McClure. His work is highly influential and Abbott draws a clear connection between Brautigan’s life and his writing. This book is essential for anyone who is interested in the work of Richard Brautigan. Raymond Carver writes, "Truly the best thing I've ever seen written of the man."


The Procession of Mollusks By Eric Olson

If Fletch took Lovecraft to see a movie and it turned out to be a double feature—'Slugs: muerte viscosa' and 'The Monster that Challenged the World'--this post-genre romp is what might have been extracted from their post-movie dreams. This is a smart, funny, and (most importantly) irreverently weird book.
—Brian Evenson, author of The Open Curtain and The Wavering Knife.


Sleepers' Republic By David Gruber

In David Gruber’s Sleepers’ Republic nature is dreaming, and we are its dreams. Time is slowed down or speeded up: “suddenly, the sun / gives way to stars.” And: “What we knew moves sudden / without warning / throwing us to the ground / an emptiness in the sea / The air above us filled with fruit.” It may be that love “offers the opposite of a kiss,” yet Gruber’s upended universe is nonetheless an exhilarating medium in which the reader can both swim and breathe.
— John Ashbery author of Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror and Notes from the Air




Past Articles