Nicola Serena di Lapigio wrote articles for many Italian and local newspapers, namely
Tribuna,
Rassegna Nazionale, ''Le Vie d'Italia
and Rassegna Pugliese'', where he was appointed co-director from 1909 to 1913. On the pages of this last newspaper, he published literary essays and reviews. In 1907, he published his work
Cesaria (B. Lux, Roma), followed in 1909 by the collection of novels
Piccole anime e piccole cose, printed in
Milan by poublisher
Casa Editrice Cogliati; the preface was written by
Antonio Fogazzaro. After a period of stagnation, his passion for writing appeared again in the 1930s, when he published a new collection of novels titled
Vecchi racconti.
Panorami garganici In 1934, he published what is probably his masterpiece, the collection of travel memoirs
Panorami garganici, which comprised both new and already published novels. The book, divided into nine chapters and including many pictures of Italian region
Gargano, contributed to raise awareness on this area, which was then practically uninhabited. Serena di Lapigio had a strong passion for Italian region
Apulia (''lo Sperone d'Italia''), which he knew very well, from the
Tremiti Islands, then a prison, to
Monte Sant'Angelo, from the coast of
San Menaio, to
Foresta Umbra. In his writings, he merged his sensitivity to the nature of
Gargano with the objectivity of the research of history. His prose is both elegant and clear. == See also ==