Grazia Deledda (27 September 1871 - 15 August 1936) was an
Italian writer whose works won her the Nobel Prize for Literature
for 1926.
Born in Nuoro, Sardinia into a middle-class family, she attended
elementary school and then was educated by a private tutor (a guest
of one of her relatives) and moved on to study literature on her
own.
She first published some novels in the magazine L'ultima moda when
it still published works in prose and poetry. Nell'azzurro,
published by Trevisani in 1890, might be considered as her first
work.
She died in Rome at the age of 64.