author
An Italian rabbi and educator, best known for writing a lively introduction to the Jewish year for young readers in the late 19th century. His work blends religion, history, and everyday custom in a way that still feels welcoming today.

by Felice Bachi
Felice Bachi is identified in available sources as a rabbi and the author of I mesi dell'anno ebraico, a book first published in Turin in 1880. The work presents the Jewish calendar with historical and archaeological notes, and it was written for young Jewish readers.
From the surviving descriptions of the book, he appears to have been interested in teaching through clear, practical explanation rather than abstract scholarship alone. The book moves through festivals, traditions, and aspects of Jewish history in an accessible style, which helps explain why it has continued to circulate in digital and reprinted editions.
Reliable biographical details about his life seem to be scarce in the sources I could confirm, so much of what can be said with confidence comes from the book itself and its publication history.