Skip navigation
London Review of Books Christmas Books

No. 1 Scapegoat subscriber-only content

John Foot

  • Senior Service by Carlo Feltrinelli, translated by Alastair McEwen

A bearded man lies flat on his back, arms wide apart, in a field. He has one leg. Nearby, some wires hang from the base of an electricity pylon, to which a box seems to be attached. The man is Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, 46 years old, a political militant, publisher and millionaire. The photo was taken on 15 March 1972. For more than two years Feltrinelli had been on the run from the Italian authorities. His death made headlines around the world. Many claimed that he had been murdered; others denounced him as a terrorist. The headline on the front page of Potere Operaio (‘Workers’ Power’) announced: ‘A Revolutionary Has Fallen’. Carlo Feltrinelli’s book is an attempt to explain how his father, a member of one of the richest families in Italy, ended up in that field, next to that pylon; but Carlo was ten when his father died, and it is evident that he is also working through difficult and fragmentary memories of an absent, neglectful and very famous father.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

John Foot teaches at University College London. His books include Milan since the Miracle: City, Culture and Identity and Calcio: A History of Italian Football.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

After the Revolution
Neal Ascherson reports from Georgia

Just Another Western Journalist
John Lloyd in Romania

Attempts to Escape the Logic of Capitalism
Slavoj Žižek: Václav Havel

An Assembly of Ghosts
Eric Hobsbawm: Gorbachev, My Hero

Short Cuts
Daniel Soar: The Kursk