Morrissey at Keats' grave by Andy Fallon graces the cover of "Qui giace un poeta" ("Here rests a poet").
Description taken from Amazon Italy (translated from Italian):
"Over fifty Italian and foreign authors - including writers, artists, publishers, journalists, booksellers and bloggers - united by a passion for traveling to the graves of poets and novelists. Luxurious tombs, like that of Oscar Wilde, or simple tombstones in a meadow, like those of Jack Kerouac and James Joyce, tombs housed in famous cemeteries - the Père-Lachaise of Paris or the non-Catholic of Rome - or hidden in the middle of mountains desert, covered by the secret of a monastery, such as that of Javsandamba Zanabazar, a Mongolian artist and poet, venerated at home as a saint. Tombs that collect bones and ashes, nothing more, but which are often the destination of enthralling pilgrimages. Because when you viscerally love a poet or a writer who is now dead and buried, the words he has left are not enough, diaries, letters are not enough, biographies and auto-biographies. When you love someone who is no longer there, the day always comes when the desire to "see him once more" becomes irresistible, to go and find him where he lies forever. What does it feel like - what emotions, memories, reflections are triggered - when you are in front of the tomb of a beloved artist? What's the story behind that tombstone? And what's the story behind that pilgrimage? The authors involved write about this: they made their pilgrimage and told us about it. Massimiliano Governi on the tomb of Sandro Onofri, Daniele Mencarelli on the trail of Camillo Sbarbaro, Barry Gifford between the cemeteries of Paris and Venice, Matteo Trevisani in memory of Giordano Bruno, Giovanni Dozzini in search of Elio Vittorini, Tyler Keevil among the Welsh moors with Dylan Thomas, Nicola Manuppelli on the trail of William Butler Yeats and many others. Some of them have chosen to describe what happened, post mortem, to some famous couples of literature, others have also ventured among the graves of characters who, in their context and in their own way, could be defined as poetic. Together they compose a mosaic of literary pilgrimages to the tombs of poets, writers and artists, to talk, through death, about life and art."