found: Her El anarquismo, más alla de la democracía, 1983:t.p. (Luce Fabbri)
found: Her Luigi Fabbri, 1996:t.p. (Luce Fabbri) p. 4 of cover (b. Rome Jul. 25, 1908; lives in Uruguay)
found: Historia de un hombre libre, [2002]:t.p. (Luce Fabbri) front cover flap (Luce Fabbri Cressatti; d. August 19, 2000)
found: Organizzazione, 1950:cover (a cura di l. f.) preface (Luce Fabbri)
found: Wikipedia, December 9, 2019(Luce Fabbri; Luce Fabbri (pen name, Luz de Alba; 1908--2000) was an Italian anarchist writer, publisher and daughter of Luigi Fabbri; she was born in Rome and studied literature in Bologna; Fabbri left Italy illegally to be reunited with her exiled parents in Paris and joined them after their expulsion from France to Belgium and finally to Montevideo, Uruguay; she became a teacher of history at a secondary school; during the 1936 Spanish Revolution, she organized support for the Spanish anarchists; she taught Italian literature at Uruguay's University of the Republic from 1949 until 1991, interrupted from 1974-1986 by the military regime; during the Spanish Revolution she published Il Risorgimento and during the Second World War served as editor of the Italian page of Socialismo y Libertad; in Uruguay she published Studi Sociali with her father; she also authored I Canti dell'Attesa 1932, Camisas Negras 1935, 19 de Julio Antología de la Revolucíon Española (under the pseudonym Luz de Alba) 1937, La Poesía de Leopardi 1971, Luigi Fabbri-Storia d'un nomo libero (not yet published), of many pamphlets and contributions to libertarian and literary periodicals in Uruguay and Argentina)