Throughout the novel, Silone uses multiple stories of peasant characters apart from the main plot and help make the characters more relatable and understandable. Examples of the subsidiary stories are Pietro Spina meets with Uliva, and Murica, both revolutionaries. Both of which of the stories express the disappointment towards the fascist government of the powers in Italy and the disillusionment that fell upon the revolutionaries attempt to destroy the government. The roles the characters of Uliva and Murica play within Bread and Wine allow Silone to show the experiences of his involvement within the Communist party in Italy through differing qualities of the characters. As previously mentioned the author himself has come in contact with the communist party at a point and had become disillusioned with the party’s hypocrisy and tyranny. Bread and Wine, was initially part a study in political disillusionment. The novel reveals the reactions toward social injustice in at the roots of Silone’s drive to write stories. However, the story's main focus is more on a group that is known as the Communist resistance movement and views of the intellectual class. Which itself is a direct reference to the events the author had experienced in reality and how the author was generally members of parties known as the Communist Party of Italy and the Italian Socialist