Giovanni Boccaccio
Although Giovanni Boccaccio Was Born In France And Raised And Educated In Naples, Where He Wrote His First Works Under The Patronage Of The French Angevin Ruler, Boccaccio Always Considered Himself A Tuscan, Like Petrarch And Dante. After Boccaccop Returned To Florence In 1340, He Witnessed The Outbreak Of The Great Plague, Or Black Death, In 1348. This Provided The Setting For His Most Famous Work, The Vernacular Prose Masterpiece Il Decamerone (Decameron) (1353). This Collection Of 100 Short Stories, Told By 10 Florentines Who Leave Plague-Infected Florence For The Neighboring Hill Town Of F
Cleland John, De Sade Marques, Boccaccio Giovanni:
Erotica: Fanny Hill/La Filosofia en el Tocador/El Decameron
Obras Maestras
Edimat , 2007
Hardcover, 789 pages
Boccaccio Giovanni:
The Decameron
Translator: Mark Musa, Translator: Peter E. Bondanella
Signet Classics , 2002
Mass paperback, 848 pages
Boccaccio Giovanni:
de Mulieribus Claris
Itrl( 1)
Editor: Virginia Brown
Harvard University Press, 2001
Hardcover, 560 pages
Boccaccio Giovanni:
Life of Dante
Translator: J. G. Nichols, Foreword by: A. N. Wilson
Hesperus Press , 2003
Quality paperback, 91 pages
Boccaccio Giovanni:
The Decameron: Selected Tales
Dover Thrift Editions
Editor: Bob Blaisdell
Dover Publications , 2000
Quality paperback, 192 pages
Brink Carol Ryrie:
Caddie Woodlawn
Illustrator: Giovanni Boccaccio, Illustrator: Trina Schart Hyman
Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing , 1973
Hardcover, 288 pages
Boccaccio Giovanni:
The Decameron: A New Translation: 21 Novelle, Contemporary Reactions, Modern Criticism
Norton Critical Editions
Editor: Mark Musa, Editor: Peter E. Bondanella
W. W. Norton & Company, 1980
Quality paperback, 334 pages








