"Un libro notevole / A remarkable novel."
— Raphael d’Abdon
"Straordinario, Valentina Acava scava nei nodi irrisolti dell’identità / Extraordinary, Valentina Acava digs in the unresolved knots of identity."
— Daniele Barbieri
"Sin dalle prime pagine che ho letto del libro di Valentina Acava sono stata presa da una profonda emozione. D’improvviso mi sono ritrovata a rivivere i tempi in cui la lotta contro l’apartheid ci aveva tutti coinvolti con forte passione. Erano i giorni, gli anni, in cui ogni azione era tesa a denunciare una delle ingiustizie più atroci della storia dell’umanità: la discriminazione violenza cieca e bestiale basata solo sul colore della pelle. [...] La colta maniera di trattare la vita, in Valentina Acava mai è a scapito di una sofferta e sincera partecipazione al dramma umano. Di questo le sono molto grata, perché attraverso le sue parole ho avuto l’occasione di scoprire anche parte di me stessa. In Valentina riconosco una sorella vera."
— Maria De Lourdes Jesus
"From the very first pages I read of Valentina Acava’s book, I was taken by deep emotion. Suddenly I found myself reliving the times when the struggle against apartheid had involved us all with great passion. Those were the days, the years, in which every action was aimed at denouncing one of the most atrocious injustices in the history of mankind: blind and bestial discrimination and violence based only on skin color. […] The cultured way of dealing with life in Valentina Acava is never at the expense of a suffered and sincere participation in the human drama. I am very grateful to her for this because through her words I had the opportunity to discover part of myself. In Valentina, I recognize a true sister."
— Maria De Lourdes Jesus
A COMPARATIVE STUDY
Prof. Antonella Piazza | UNISA
"The purpose of this presentation is to offer a comparative reading of the texts Cercando Lindiwe (Looking for Lindiwe) by Valentina Acava and If This is a Man by Primo Levi, and, limited to them, to investigate the question of identity that emerges in the two regimes of segregation in which these texts are set: that of South African apartheid and that of the Nazi labor camps. The aim is to show how Lindiwe’s and Levi’s stories, which are distant in time and space, have several common features and similar existential problems."