William Weaver


William Fense Weaver was an English language translator of modern Italian literature.

Biography

Weaver was best known for his translations of the work of Umberto Eco, Primo Levi and Italo Calvino, but translated many other Italian authors over the course of a career which spanned more than fifty years. In addition to prose, he translated Italian poetry and opera libretti, and worked as a critic and commentator on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts.
According to his nephew, Weaver was probably born in Washington, D.C., but spent a portion of the year in Virginia during his childhood. Educated at Princeton University he graduated with a B.A. summa cum laude in 1946, followed by postgraduate study at the University of Rome in 1949. Weaver was an ambulance driver in Italy during World War II for the American Field Service, and lived primarily in Italy after the end of the war. Through his friendships with Elsa Morante, Alberto Moravia and others, Weaver met many of Italy's leading authors and intellectuals in Rome in the late 1940s and early 1950s; he paid tribute to them in his anthology Open City.
Later in his life, Weaver was a professor of literature at Bard College in New York, and a Bard Center Fellow. He received honorary degrees from the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom and Trinity College in Connecticut. According to translator Geoffrey Brock, Weaver was too ill to translate Umberto Eco's novel, The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana.
Weaver died in Rhinebeck, New York state.

Major translations

Italo Calvino

;Fiction
;Non-fiction
;Fiction
;Non-fiction
Bellonci, Maria
Berto, Giuseppe
Calasso, Roberto
Capriolo, Paola
Cassola, Carlo
De Carlo, Andrea
De Cespedes, Alba
Elkann, Alain
Fallaci, Oriana
Festa Campanile, Pasquale
Fruttero, Carlo & Lucentini, Franco
Gadda, Carlo Emilio
La Capria, Raffaele
Lavagnino, Alessandra
Levi, Primo
Loy, Rosetta
Luciani, Albino
Malerba, Luigi
Montale, Eugenio
Morante, Elsa
Moravia, Alberto
Moretti, Ugo
Parise, Goffredo
Pasolini, Pier Paolo
Pirandello, Luigi
Rosso, Renzo
Sanguineti, Edoardo
Silone, Ignazio
Soldati, Mario
Svevo, Italo
Verdi, Giuseppe and Arrigo Boito
Zavattini, Cesare

Monographs