He maintains a very concentrated line in his literary landscape, showing his freedom and dominion of fiction in the true style of Samuel Beckett. Conejeras & Camaleones is a book in which the originality of his approach is a genuine expression of his love of words, such as he conceives them.
Maritza Luza Castillo[The] absurdity achieves compensation by how well crafted the personalities are. We will not find a single character that falters in cheap clichés and stereotypes....
We are far from wanting to read something “simple” or what is commonly called “intellectual mush.” Pucci introduces a different rhythm. He stops at actions that at a glance might seem trivial, even regular, and yet precisely there, in that brief moment, he gives full rein to his imagination.
Gianfranco Hereña[Conejeras & camaleones,] with vigorous language and a particular look, a book of short-stories that presents us with real and fantastic figures in cities in which the rules are imposed and one never knows which is the right door. A work of rebellious style that refuses classification, an exploration guided by aesthetics rather than narrative or, as Truman Capote used to say, a search for that music that words sometimes learn how to make.
Altazor Magazine[Pucci] pleasantly surprises us once again with Conejeras & camaleones, a book of short-stories that, besides displaying organicity, has a rather unique style.
Carlos M. Sotomayor[The short-stories] are majestic essays of this careful search for meaning by neurotic characters subjected to a reality that crumbles under them, that frustrates their demands, that curses their waiting, that postpones, indefinitely, the heat from summer....
Each short-story exhibits figures and allegories belonging to a unique surrealism, which (I quote this week's press) “defies the canons of contemporary literature.”
L.M. Olguín[Pucci] brings us his second book “Conejeras & camaleones,” a work of fiction that absolutely refuses any classification.
La RazónAnimated short-film inspired by the book of short-stories by Alessandro Pucci «Conejeras & camaleones».
[The short-stories] are majestic essays of this careful search for meaning by neurotic characters subjected to a reality that crumbles under them, that frustrates their demands, that curses their waiting, that postpones, indefinitely, the heat from summer....
Each short-story exhibits figures and allegories belonging to a unique surrealism, which (I quote this week's press) “defies the canons of contemporary literature.”