"Gli immortali" or "The immortals" was the first book I've read by this author, after a friend's recommendation. It carries the subtitle "Tales from a future world", which was the main hook for me, personally. Having finished it, I must say it was a weird one.
It could be best described as a travelogue, with an urban-fantasy spin to it. The protagonist, which is to say - the writer - has once, a long time ago, had his fortune read by a fortune-teller on the shore of lake Baikal, and later an Indian Brahmin. Both have told him that he will die a violent death at the onset of middle age. And, that only a man from the future could save him. The protagonist ignores the warning and lives his life normally, up until the death clock is getting near. That's when he decides to travel the world in search of this mysterious "man from the future".
I haven't researched it, but I believe the novel is in fact fictionalized. A mock travel book. The protagonist flies from place to place, and encounters individuals from many "futuristic fields" - extreme doomsday preppers, nano-scientists, biochemists, botanists, cryogenic fanatics, AI experts, even priests. They all have some piece of life wisdom to offer, and point our journeyman to his next destination.
We don't get to see the actual travels, though. Each chapter begins with the protagonist arriving at his current stop (akin to teleporting, really), where he usually has a meeting arranged with person X or Y. What ensues is a brief introduction to the person, what s/he does, and where s/he operates. This is usually a research lab of some sort.
Giuliani's writing style is peculiar, too. The mood he evokes throughout is a mix between hope and despair. The writer's voice is detached, cold and distant. Resigned, if you will. He observes things around him in a rather emotionless manner, though his comments are at times very passionate as he romanticizes about a certain time, place, sentiment or custom. Though he, and others, ultimately carry a fatalistic world-view. We are doomed, one way or the other, is the motto. The vibe is a post-apocalypse (or rather, per-apocalypse) infused with philosophy and spirituality. Some characters had good points about a certain something, while others had nothing insightful to offer.
In general, reading this novel was a very ups-and-downs experience. As a sidenote, this is the longest time it took me to finish a book - ever. I've been reading it since 11/2019, and I'm only putting it away now in 06/2020. At the time of this writing this title is only available in Italian, of which I don't have that firm of a grasp. I'm certain I've missed some nuances and cues, as a consequence. If it ever gets an English release, I'll maybe pick it up once more.