<p>The modest apartment in Via Gemito smells of paint and white spirit. The living room furniture is pushed up against the wall to create a make-shift studio, and drying canvases must be moved off the beds each night. </p><p>Feder¿the father, a railway clerk, is convinced of possessing great artistic talent. If he didn¿t have a family to feed, he¿d be a world-famous painter. Ambitious and frustrated, genuinely talented but full of arrogance and resentment, his life is marked by bitter disappointment. His long-suffering wife and their four sons bear the brunt.</p><p>It''s his first-born who, years later, will sift the lies from the truth to tell the story of a man he spent his whole life trying not to resemble. </p><p>Narrated against the background of a Naples still marked by WWII and steeped in the city¿s language and imagery, <em>The House on Via Gemito</em> ¿ first published 20 years ago - is a masterpiece of contemporary Italian literature. </p>