He then started to frequent Paris (where he was nicknamed L'ironique amusé). Perhaps it's a metabolic process, something that comes with age, I'd been young for a long time, perhaps too long, suddenly I felt that I had to begin my old age, yes, old age, perhaps with the hope of prolonging it by beginning it early". Vittorini's death in 1966 had a heavy influence on Calvino and caused him to experience what has been defined as an "intellectual depression", which the writer himself described as an important passage in his life: ".I ceased to be young. My city is New York." In the States he also met Esther Judith Singer, whom he married a few years later in Havana, during a trip in which he visited his birthplace and met Ernesto Che Guevara.īack in Italy, and once again working for Einaudi, he started publishing some of his cosmicomics in Il Caffè, a literary magazine. Calvino was particularly impressed by the "New World": "Naturally I visited the South and also California, but I always felt a New Yorker. Together with Vittorini he became a co-editor of Il Menabò di letteratura, a position that he held for many years.ĭespite the previously severe restrictions for foreigners holding communist views, he was allowed to visit the United States, where he stayed six months (four of which he spent in New York), after an invitation by the Ford Foundation. He found new spaces for his periodic writings in the magazines Passato e Presente and Italia Domani. It was in 1957 that Calvino unexpectedly left the Communist party, and his letter of resignation (soon famous) was published in L'Unità. In 1952 Calvino wrote with Giorgio Bassani for Botteghe Oscure, a magazine named after the popular name of the party's head-offices, and worked for Il Contemporaneo, a Marxist weekly. The reports and correspondence he produced from this visit were later collected and earned him literary prizes.
The following year, presumably in order to verify a possibility of advancement in the communist party, he visited the Soviet Union. In 1950, he worked again for the Einaudi house, where he became responsible for the literary volumes. He then left Einaudi to work mainly with L'Unità and the newborn communist weekly political magazine Rinascita. With Vittorini he wrote for the weekly Il Politecnico (a cultural magazine associated with the university). In 1947, Calvino graduated from Turin's university with a thesis on Joseph Conrad and started working with the official Communist paper L'Unità he also had a short relationship with the Einaudi publishing house, which put him in contact with Norberto Bobbio, Natalia Ginzburg, Cesare Pavese and Elio Vittorini. He then entered the (still clandestine) Italian Communist Party.
In 1943, he joined the Partisans in the Italian Resistance, in the Garibaldi brigade, with the battlename of Santiago, and with Scalfari he created the MUL (liberal universitarian movement). He often humorously described this choice, and used to define Turin as "a city that is serious but sad." In 1941 he moved to Turin, after a long hesitation over living in this town or Milan. He met Eugenio Scalfari (later a politician and the founder of the major newspaper La Repubblica), with whom he would remain a close friend. He suffered some religious troubles, his relatives being followers of the Waldensian Protestant Church. He stayed in San Remo, on the Italian Riviera, for some 20 years, and enrolled in the Avanguardisti (a fascist youth organisation to which membership was practically compulsory) with whom he took part in the occupation of the French Riviera.