In 1944
Maria and Goffredo Bellonci started to host a literary
salon at their home in Rome. These Sunday gatherings of writers, artists and intellectuals grew to include many of the most notable figures of Italian cultural life. The group became known as the
Amici della Domenica, or Sunday Friends. In 1947 the Belloncis, together with Guido Alberti, owner of the firm which produces the
Strega liqueur, decided to inaugurate a prize for fiction, the winner being chosen by the Sunday friends. The activities of the Bellonci circle and the institution of the prize were seen as marking a tentative return to ‘normality’ in Italian cultural life: a feature of the reconstruction which followed the years of Fascism, war, occupation and liberation. The first winner of the Strega, elected by the Sunday Friends, was
Ennio Flaiano, for his first and only novel
Tempo di uccidere, which is set in Africa during the
Second Italo-Abyssinian War. It has been translated into English as
A Time to Kill and
The Short Cut. Maria Bellonci published a history of the Strega prize, titled
Come un racconto gli anni del premio Strega, in 1971. ==Selection process==