
Dino Buzzati's
The Tartar Steppe is one of those books where it pays to read something about it before you start. It's the sort of book they study in literature courses, the sort of book that you have to work at.
Fortunately the edition I have contains an introduction written by Tim Parks, but you could also check out the
Wikipedia page before you buy. Buzzati originally titled it
The Fortress, which is a better title. Most of us can visualise a fortress in reality as well as metaphorically, whereas
The Tartar Steppe invokes a sauce I like to eat with fried fish. When the introduction tells you, "
for an Italian, the northern mountains are the locus par excellence of military glory" it gives the title some meaning.