Tag Archives: Italian american literature

The Place I Call Home by Maria Mazziotti Gillan

The Place I Call Home by Maria Mazziotti Gillan
A Review by Vittoria repetto
This review will appear in Winter 2013 issue of VIA ( Voices in Italian Americana) magazine.

Though the years, Maria Mazziotti Gillan has painted wonderful pictures of her life via her narrative poems.

In her new book, The Place I Call Home, she gives us vivid images of the house she grew up in, images of her mother washing clothes and sewing to supplement the family income and making sure that her family was well fed though she never spent money on frivolities like blueberries.
“…remember my mother’s refrigerator
that was always full of homemade food – bread, meatballs,
braciola, spinach, broccoli rabe, but no blueberries,
this small berry I didn’t taste until I was a grown women
and married myself, and I imagine my mother’s horror
at the thought of he spoiled daughter paying $3.95 a pint
for blueberries just because she wants them.”

These are stories of a mother who only went to the 3rd grade in Italy buying her daughter a typewriter so she could be a writer.
But these poems go deeper than nostalgia for one’s family or the difference between an immigrant family and a first generation “American girl.”

There are revealing poems like “Doing the Twist with Bobby Darin” that deal with her shyness about her body and dancing w. someone who thinks a Italian girl is loose and easy.
“my friend’s husband dragged me
out onto the dance floor, expecting
that I would be loose and easy,
imagining that all my energy
would translate into an abandon I never felt…….
……….. I understood
that he thought my Italian bloo
meant I was hot like Sophia Loren
or Anna Magnani.”

There are poems that strike at our hearts and make us sigh sadly when she talks about her husband having Parkinson’s and not being in the same bedroom with him, of Dennis getting to the point where he will not know her.

There are angry poems about her ex son-in-law who hurt her daughter badly when they divorced.

This book will make you laugh and cry and every emotion in between; buy it!

© 2012 Vittoria Repetto

Video of Gregory Corso reading his poem “Marriage.”

A video from youtube of Gregory Corso reading his poem “Marriage:”

Three Figs – a poem by Maria Fama

THREE FIGS

Direct from the store on a hot July morning

you bound brilliant and sunny through the front door

in your hands

three green plump figs

wrapped in leaves

the first of the season

brought into the grocery store from a neighbor’s tree

It’s still too soon for our backyard tree

to bear its large purple figs we will pick in September

You in the yellow Italian soccer shirt, I in the matching blue

delighted with the figs and each other

we laugh as though we still were the teenagers

we were when we first met

You say

as long as we are together

we will always be fifteen

It is high summer now in a light filled dining room

we savor and share three green figs on two china plates.

Reprinted by permission of Maria Fama

Bio of Maria Fama’

Maria Fama’ lives and works in Philadelphia. She is the author of four books of poetry. Her most recent book, Looking for Cover, was published by Bordighera Press.

Mary Bucci Bush’s novel Sweet Hope – Winner or Finalist in 3 Awards

Mary Bucci Bush’s novel Sweet Hope has recently been named a winner or finalist in three awards: 1. Winner: Working Class Studies Association’s Tillie Olsen Award for Published Book 2.“Finalist”: Binghamton University’s John Gardner Book Award (they will note this on announcement flyers & on their website. (Winner: Meg Wolitzer’s The Uncoupling).
3.“Finalist”: 2012 Paterson Fiction Prize. (Winner: Steve Almond’s God Bless American: Stories).

Sweet Hope (Prose Series)
Sweet Hope is a novel about the friendship between two families, one Black and one Italian, living and working together on a Mississippi Delta cotton plantation 1901-1906. Italians were illegally imported to the South under false pretenses and held in a contract labor system designed to put and keep them in debt while the few remaining African American sharecroppers taught the Italians to work cotton, speak English, and survive. A vicious manager/ overseer, an absentee plantation owner, a rape, an interracial “Romeo and Juliet” love affair, a murder, and hints of a Federal investigation complicate the characters’ lives as they learn bitter truths about race and friendship in America.

The novel was inspired by the childhood experiences of Bush’s grandmother and her family who were unwitting participants in the “Italian Colony Experiment.”

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