Alessandra Farkas (born August 9, 1954) is an Italian-American journalist and writer.
Family
Alessandra Farkas is the third of five children of Maria Ortenzi, textile designer born in Rome, and Paolo Farkas, Hungarian artist born in Paris, forced to leave Budapest in 1948. Together they pioneered the Italian textile design industry in the 60's and 70's.[1] One of her great-grandfathers, Baron Adolf Kohner, was the president of the Federation of Jewish Communities in Hungary[2] between the two World Wars. Her other great-grandfather, Jozsef Wolfner (1856-1932), a prominent art collector, was the founder of the book publishing house Singer and Wolfner. Her grandfather, István Farkas, was one of the prominent Eastern European painters affiliated with the Ecole de Paris.[3] Her maternal grandfather, Luigi Ortenzi, was a respected Naïve art painter of Italian landscapes.
Journalistic career
After studying Languages and Comparative Literature at the University of Florence, in 1981 Alessandra moved to Manhattan, where she lived with her husband and two children. She is a member of PEN American Center.
She began her journalistic career in 1981 as a New York reporter for the weekly magazine L'Europeo.
Besides being a journalist, Alessandra Farkas is also a blogger. Her blog Route 66 appears on the website of Corriere della Sera, focusing upon some of the lesser-known aspects of American society. For the last three years she has written a monthly column for Shalom, the oldest and most widely circulated periodical of the Italian Jewish community.
Works
She has been interviewed on numerous occasions by Italian and American media including the Charlie Rose show,[20]CNN and the bilingual magazine i-Italy.[21] In 2006, she published her first book Pranzo di Famiglia (Lunch with the Family) which tells the story of her family, founders of one of the largest and most influential publishers of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[22]
In December 2014, she was awarded "The Amerigo Special Prize", given for the best coverage of America by an Italian journalist.
[23][24]
In May 2015 "La Lettura" ebook [25] published her extended essay "Cosa resta della Letteratura", based upon her interviews over the past two decades with Harold Bloom, the noted American literary critic.[26]