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Terra degli uomini

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Incentrato su esperienze in gran parte autobiografiche, sorretto da uno stile intenso e poetico, ma di una poesia vera e mai ridondante, "Terra degli uomini" rappresenta senza dubbio - insieme al precedente "Volo di notte", pubblicato in questa stessa collana - uno dei capolavori dedicati all'epoca pionieristica dell'aviazione civile. Ma al di là di questo, al di là delle avventure dei piloti Jean Mermoz e Henri Guillaumet, "Terra degli uomini" è soprattutto l'epopea del coraggio individuale, visto però non come fine a se stesso, ma come mezzo per dare un senso alla propria "L'uomo scopre se stesso allorché si misura con l'ostacolo", scrive Saint-Exupéry; ed è proprio la scoperta di sé ciò che si cela dietro il mondo avventuroso del grande scrittore francese, una scoperta che sta al centro anche della sua opera più famosa, quel "Piccolo Principe" per il quale è diventato uno degli autori universalmente più letti. Ma, come dimostrano tante pagine di "Terra degli uomini", accanto a questa consapevolezza individuale c'è l'aspirazione di ogni uomo ad appartenere a una stessa comunità; è proprio questo che lo scrittore vede nelle rare luci accese qua e là, mentre sorvola di notte paesaggi minacciosi e pianure deserte.

159 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 22, 2025

About the author

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

1,576 books8,806 followers
People best know French writer and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry for his fairy tale The Little Prince (1943).

He flew for the first time at the age of 12 years in 1912 at the Ambérieu airfield and then determined to a pilot. Even after moving to a school in Switzerland and spending summer vacations at the château of the family at Saint-Maurice-de-Rémens in east, he kept that ambition. He repeatedly uses the house at Saint-Maurice.

Later, in Paris, he failed the entrance exams for the naval academy and instead enrolled at the prestigious l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts. In 1921, Saint-Exupéry, stationed in Strasbourg, began serving in the military. He learned and forever settled his career path as a pilot. After leaving the service in 1923, Saint-Exupéry worked in several professions but in 1926 went back and signed as a pilot for Aéropostale, a private airline that from Toulouse flew mail to Dakar, Senegal. In 1927, Saint-Exupéry accepted the position of airfield chief for Cape Juby in southern Morocco and began his first book, a memoir, called Southern Mail and published in 1929.

He then moved briefly to Buenos Aires to oversee the establishment of an Argentinean mail service, returned to Paris in 1931, and then published Night Flight , which won instant success and the prestigious Prix Femina. Always daring Saint-Exupéry tried from Paris in 1935 to break the speed record for flying to Saigon. Unfortunately, his plane crashed in the Libyan Desert, and he and his copilot trudged through the sand for three days to find help. In 1938, a second plane crash at that time, as he tried to fly between city of New York and Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, seriously injured him. The crash resulted in a long convalescence in New York.

He published Wind, Sand and Stars , next novel, in 1939. This great success won the grand prize for novel of the academy and the national book award in the United States. Saint-Exupéry flew reconnaissance missions at the beginning of the Second World War but went to New York to ask the United States for help when the Germans occupied his country. He drew on his wartime experiences to publish Flight to Arras and Letter to a Hostage in 1942.

Later in 1943, Saint-Exupéry rejoined his air squadron in northern Africa. From earlier plane crashes, Saint-Exupéry still suffered physically, and people forbade him to fly, but he insisted on a mission. From Borgo, Corsica, on 31 July 1944, he set to overfly occupied region. He never returned.

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