Used
                                                
                                            
                                            Paperback
                                            1995
                                            
                                                
                                                    $6.29
                                        
                                            
                                                In the early summer of the year 1348, as a terrible plague ravages the city, ten charming young Florentines take refuge in country villas to tell each other stories - a hundred stories of love, adventure and surprising twists of fortune which later inspired Chaucer, Keats and Shakespeare. While Dante is a stern moralist, Boccaccio has little time for chastity, pokes fun at crafty, hypocritical clerics and celebrates the power of passion to overcome obstacles and social divisions. Like the Divine Comedy, the Decameron is a towering monument of medieval pre-Renaissance literature, and incorporates certain important elements that are not at once apparent to today's readers. In a new introduction to this revised edition, which also includes additional explanatory notes, maps, bibliography and indexes, Professor McWilliam shows us Boccaccio for what he is - one of the world's greatest masters of vivid and exciting prose fiction.
                                            
                                        
                                    
                                        
                                            
                                                
                                               New
                                                
                                            
                                            Paperback
                                            2003
                                            
                                                
                                                    $15.00
                                        
                                            
                                                A seminal work of European literature that has inspired writers from Chaucer to Shakespeare, the  Penguin Classics  edition of Giovanni Boccaccio's  The Decameron  is translated with an introduction by G.H. McWilliam. In the summer of 1348, as the  Black Death  ravages their city, ten young Florentines take refuge in the countryside. Taken from the Greek, meaning 'ten-day event', Boccaccio's Decameron sees his characters amuse themselves by each telling a story a day, for the ten days of their confinement - a hundred stories of love and adventure, life and death, and surprising twists of fate. Less preoccupied with abstract concepts of morality or religion than earthly values, the tales range from the bawdy Peronella, hiding her lover in a tub, to Ser Cepperallo, who, despite his unholy effrontery, becomes a Saint. The result is a towering monument of European literature and a masterpiece of imaginative narrative. This is the second edition of G.H. McWilliam's acclaimed translation of the  Decameron . In his introduction McWilliam illuminates the worlds of Boccaccio and of his storytellers, showing Boccaccio as a master of vivid and exciting prose fiction.
Boccaccio (1313-75) was an Italian writer of both verse and prose. He wrote  The Decameron  over a period of ten years, and is also the author of  Teseide and Filostrato . If you enjoyed  The Decameron , you might like Dante's  Inferno , also available in  Penguin Classics .  McWilliam's finest work, his translation of Boccaccio's  Decameron  remains one of the most successful and lauded books in the series . ( The Times ).