I agree that this book is clearly utter nonsense.
However, I do hope that one day a detailed NON-fiction
biography of Evola appears in English (I assume that
there must be at least one in Italian by now). From
what I understand, after his injury in 1945 he rarely
left his Rome apartment, but prior to that his life
certainly spanned many interesting experiences and
individuals.
The idea of him eating "mysterious chocolate" may seem
ridiculous in the context of this invented story,
although one should remember that Evola did experiment
with psychedelics in his youth. Also, is there any
evidence to indicate that Evola ever did meet with
Fellini? I can't really imagine what they would have
had to say to each other (aesthetically, politically
and philosophically they would appear to be polar
opposites), but it seems, at the very least,
plausible. And who was Maria Naglowska?
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com