A comic satire on the futility of man, but also a more serious reflection of writer Vitaliano Brancati's 'lost years' after turning his back on the Fascist Party, which he once had strongly running through his veins. The novel concerns a small group of friends who rather than put in the effort to get the most out of life, simply cave in to the boredom of killing time, waiting for something to happen, living in what is believed to be a fictional version of Catania, Sicily. Weeks turn into months, and months into wasted years, until an enterprising and high-spirited outsider arrives into town with the proposition of building a tower that will bring wealth (more for his own pockets it would seem) and prosperity to the town; a town which seems to be just one giant siesta. Again time ebbs and flows away, and a year turns into a decade, but the venture is continually put on hold through the bureaucracy of red tape and lack of funds. Still, the stubborn so-and-so manages to excite and rouse the town, get bums off seats, acquire loans, to reach the finish line. Despite the fact that nothing really happens - even the building of the tower is never described in any detail - it's the caricatures of Sicilian provincials that make the difference here, turning it into a quite enriching novel that dazzles rather than a dull one that falls asleep. I'd already read Brancati's Beautiful Antonio - also a film starring La Dolce Vita's Marcello Mastroianni, but thought this was the better of the two.