Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Shepherd Avenue by Charlie Carillo



Shepherd Avenue is billed as a coming-of-age novel about a young boy who has to deal with a heck of a lot of loss of loved ones in a very short space of time. Coming-of-age novels tend to have an episodic structure, and this book is not different. Instead of having the support of his father during this time, he has been dumped at his grandparents' place, a place as foreign to him as another country.

The loss of his wayward father hits the child as hard as the losses due to death. Much of the story is about the boy's dealing with his feelings of abandonment. The rest of the story is about the boy dealing with his exuberant relations and their in-your-face neighbors. Young love gets in the mix too at a certain point. All the characters come alive with realistic dialog and actions, along with quick descriptions that paint clear pictures.





There is some foul language, racial slurs, deaths, children playing doctor, and animals being slaughtered. To be honest, I could have done without every scene that involved life of creatures other than human. If the story were true, I would have said “so be it”, but since the story is fiction, I wondered “why was that included?”. But the accounts of animals being slaughtered are accurate and true to life.

Set in 1961, there is a big helping of segregation, bigotry and sexism. The culture clash between the boy and his very Italian-American, Brooklyn-living family is strong, but just as strong is the clash between the family and the society at large. 1961 was a time of birth-control, women's liberation movements, black power movements, changing music and clothes and a whole universe of social norms. Rich details from that era set the reader front and center as a spectator to the clashes. I enjoyed the writing style, first-person with hindsight, and being transported to another place and time.





From the book's description:
An American Library Association Notable Book of the Year

From acclaimed author Charlie Carillo comes a poignant, darkly funny, coming-of-age story set in the heart of Italian-American Brooklyn, New York, and the heat of one eventful 1960s summer . . .

Ten-year-old Joey Ambrosio has barely begun to grieve his mother’s death when his father abruptly uproots him from his sedate suburban Long Island home, and deposits him at his estranged grandparents’ house in boisterous East New York. While his dad takes off on an indefinite road trip, Joey is left to navigate unfamiliar terrain. Besides his gruff Italian grandparents, there's his teenage Uncle Vic, a baseball star obsessed with the music of Frank Sinatra; a steady diet of soulful, hearty foods he’s never tasted, and a community teeming with life, from endless gossip and arguments to curse-laden stickball games under the elevated train. It’s a world where privacy doesn’t exist and there’s no time to feel sorry for yourself. Most of all, it’s where Joey learns not only how to fight, and how to heal, but how to love—and ultimately, how to forgive.

Here's a direct link to the book at Amazon.com:



Please visit the author's website. And The East New York Project has some images of Shepherd Avenue from around the time of the book.









Monday, February 2, 2015

Her Brooding Italian Boss by Susan Meier




I was pleasantly surprised by this book.  To be honest, with that silly title I wasn't expecting much.  It is a well-written clean contemporary romance featuring an Italian-American man, Antonio, and his Italian father.  The young woman who falls for Antonio's honest charms and not and just his good looks, Laura Beth, benefits from the relationship just as much Antonio does. 

"He was a good man, with a big heart and so much talent she almost couldn't fathom it."

That Antonio is in line to inherit his father's millions, and that he lives the life of a millionaire, is not really that important of a factor in the couple's growing relationship.  This is very refreshing in a genre seemingly flooded with women prostituting themselves to be with millionaires and billionaires. 





We see the story from two points of view, Antonio's and Laura Beth's, with a third-person limited narration.  But at times the author uses an omniscient narrator.  Both characters are given interesting back stories, shaping their present selves into convincing people.  For my tastes, I found the book spent too much time in the characters' minds, growing repetitive at times, and there was too little action taking place, but that is often the style with this genre.

The couple have known each other for years, and have always felt an attraction, but the timing of life's events has always been off.  This makes their inevitable coupling seem more convincing than in those stories that want us to believe in a couple's happily-ever-after, after only a few weeks of knowing each other.





Part of the story takes place in the States, and part of the story happens in Italy's region of Tuscany.  We even have a quick jaunt to Barcelona, Spain.  The author gives us a satisfying finish.  But there are several themes left unresolved after the abrupt ending of this novella-length book:  Antonio's painting and his career, her career, where the couple will live...  One more chapter would have completed the story of this modern Mr. Rochester/Jane Eyre nicely for me.







This book is published by Harlequin Romance.  From the book's description:
From his assistant…to his muse!

Pregnant and broke, Laura Beth's only option is to take a job with brooding yet brilliant artist Antonio Bartulocci.  He may be darkly handsome, but the fiery Italian proves to be a difficult boss!

Since his wife's betrayal, Antonio has been unable to pick up a brush.  But captivated by Laura Beth's guileless beauty, he wonders if she could be the woman to unlock the talent he thought he'd lost forever… It's a miracle which reminds him of all that's now good in this life:  Laura Beth! 

Have you never been to the Siena area of Tuscany?  Here is a 2 minute video introduction to the area's unique landscape.







Here are direct links to the book at Amazon.com as a Kindle e-book and paperback, and as part of a 3-e-book bundle at a special price:









This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.





Sunday, January 4, 2015

Stella Mia by Rosanna Chiofalo




Stella Mia is a novel written as a memoirs.  All in the present tense, the past and the distant past events recounted in the book enjoy equal immediacy.  A grown U.S. American daughter tells her version of the events surrounding the departure of her Italian mother back to Italy.  When she discovers her mother's diary, the daughter and the reader discover the mother's version of events.

In Astoria, New York, first, second and third generation Italian-Americans make up many of the characters in this story.  The other characters are Sicilian and Calabrian.  The events recounted occur in America and in Italy, in the near past and in the distant past.  This book is so-called women's fiction, which I think is a rather insulting category name.  So I will describe this in more traditional terms:  a family drama.




The mother's childhood in Italy is an excruciating story to read.  Physical and psychological abuse takes a toll on the woman not just in the past, but throughout her whole life.  It is a relief to read of the happiness she finds, here and there, in her life.  But the overall feeling is that she is doomed from the start to suffer. 

The story takes on the feel of a family saga when the story of the past takes over.  Our visits to Astoria, New York, with the grown daughter are fleeting.  I think I enjoyed the last part of the story the best, when the grown daughter meets her aged mother in Sicily, and learns the rest of the story directly from her mother.  There is, of course, a heartwarming ending.






I'm a bit older than the 42-year-old protagonist, Julia, but I still think she is a childish woman.  Her reactions to what she learns about her mother feel like the reactions of a child, not of a grown woman.  Perhaps that is the case these days:  the perpetual adolescents of America?  I like to think that her experience in this book will make her a real grown up woman.

There are recipes at the end of the book, and a Question & Answer section with the author.  Reading clubs are provided questions to accompany Stella Mia.  The reader is told about the author's other books, and we learn that some of the characters in Stella Mia appear in the other books.





From the book's description (spoilers):
Rosanna Chiofalo's poignant, beautifully written new novel evokes the stunning scenery of Sicily and the Aeolian Islands and tells of mothers and daughters, love and sacrifice--and the choices that resound across continents and through generations.

Julia Parlatone doesn't have much to remember her Italian mother by.  A grapevine that Sarina planted still flourishes in the backyard of Julia's childhood home in Astoria, Queens.  And there's a song, "Stella Mia," she recalls her mother singing--my star, my star, you are the most beautiful star--until the day she left three-year-old Julia behind and returned to Italy for good.

Now a happily married school teacher, Julia tries not to dwell on a past she can't change or on a mother who chose to leave.  But in an old trunk in the family basement, she discovers items that belonged to her mother--a song book, Tarot cards, a Sicilian folk costume--and a diary.

Sarina writes unflinchingly of her harsh childhood and of a first, passionate love affair; of blissful months spent living in the enchanting coastal resort town of Taormina and the unspoiled Aeolian Islands north of Sicily as well as the reasons she came to New York.  By the diary's end, Julia knows she must track down her mother in Italy and piece together the rest of the complex, bittersweet truth--a journey that, for better or worse, will change her own life forever.


The author has two other books that might interest Italophiles:  Carissima and Bella Fortuna.



From the book's description:

From Rosanna Chiofalo comes a sumptuous new novel that sweeps readers from the Italian-American enclave of Astoria, New York, to the stunning vistas of Rome, and introduces two very different women--in a story of friendship, love, and destiny. . .

In college, Pia Santore dreamed of going to New York and taking the Big Apple by storm with her younger sister Erica. Instead, Pia has arrived in Astoria, Queens, with a prestigious journalism internship at a celebrity magazine. . .and without Erica. Though the neighborhood has an abundance of appeal--including the delectable confections sold at her Aunt Antoniella's bakery--the pain of losing Erica a few years ago still feels fresh.

Pia's arrival coincides with an unexpected sighting. Italian movie icon Francesca Donata is rumored to be staying nearby, every bit as voluptuous and divaesque as in her heyday. With the help of a handsome local artist with ties to Francesca's family, Pia convinces the legend to grant her a series of interviews--even traveling to her house in Rome. In the eternal city, Pia begins to unearth the truth behind the star's fabled romances and tangled past. And here too, where beauty and history mingle in every breathtaking view, and hope shimmers in the Trevi fountain and on the Spanish Steps, Pia gradually learns how to love and when to let go. For when in Rome, you may find your carissima--your dearest one--and you may even find yourself. . .





From the book's description:

In this warm, enchanting debut novel, Rosanna Chiofalo evokes the extraordinary beauty of Venice, the charm of a close-knit New York neighborhood, and the joys of friendship, family, and surprising second chances. . .

Valentina DeLuca has made hundreds of brides' dreams come true. At Sposa Rosa, the Astoria, New York, boutique where she, her sisters, and their mother design and sew couture knock-off gowns, she can find the perfect style for even the most demanding customer. Now, it's her turn. Valentina has loved Michael Carello ever since he rescued her from a cranky shopkeeper when she was ten years old. He's handsome, chivalrous, and loyal. And in a few weeks, she's going to marry him--in Venice.

But just when she thinks everything is falling into place, Valentina is forced to re-examine her life to see what truly makes her happy. And as she soon learns, in a place as magical as Venice, what seems like misfortune can turn out to be anything but, although who knows what may be waiting around the next corner? The chance to enjoy a moonlit gondola ride, to sip Prosecco in St. Mark's Square, to eat mouthwatering gelato, to put aside "sensible" for once and see where the warm Italian breezes guide her as she visits all the sights she's dreamed of: The Doge's Palace, Il Rialto, the little islands of Murano and Burano. And maybe, along the way, to discover that bella fortuna--good luck--isn't what you're given, but what you make.


Here are direct links to the author's three books, in both paperback and e-book, at Amazon.com.




Please visit the author's website.



This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.


Thursday, October 30, 2014

Violet's Problem (Violet Strange Mysteries) by Candida Martinelli


The Violet Strange Mysteries 

 

The Violet Strange Mysteries are nine detective stories for tweens, teeens and adults, each story a major case for Violet Strange, a debutante and secret high-society detective, living and working in New York City in 1899, The Gilded-Age.

The protagonist is Violet Strange. Violet is seventeen years old when the first book begins, in March of the year 1899, and Violet is set to debut into New York City's high-society.  The nine books in the series follow Violet's detecting career and life through the rest of the year, ending on New Year's Day 1900. 

Book 1:  Violet's Problem 


Violet Strange, a Gilded Age debutante, searches for her disgraced sister, risking losing everything, in the hope of saving her sister from a life of poverty and despair.  Why was her sister disgraced and disowned by their father?  She married an Italian immigrant.  That was all it took back then!  The first book in the series is offered at a special low price of .99 cents, a $2.00 discount.

There is a short flashback to Violet's childhood at the beginning of the first book in the series.  There we see Violet as a child in March of the year 1889, when her beautiful older sister, Theresa Strange, is set to debut into New York City's high-society.  The events that take place on that fateful day will change the lives of all three Strange children forever.





Never Enough Books

 

Darling adventures!  --  This is a wonderful beginning to a charming mystery series.  It's set in a time period that doesn't get covered too much, The Gilded Age, a little later than the Regency but a time when women were still hedged about with stringent societal expectations.  

Tiny Violet Strange defies convention to find her missing sister and shows extraordinary perseverance in the face of multiple setbacks.  Like all good mysteries, this one ends well, but not for long as Violet's just beginning on her detective career!

Amazon Reader 

 

A scent of Violet.  --  Delightful is the best way to describe this book. Written in a simple and precise voice it starts out slowly then steadily builds, and I found myself getting sucked into little Violet's life and struggles.

This would make a perfect gift for a young girl. And as a plus, you'll learn about languages and Italian culture...give it a try, you'll love it and will end up buying the next, and the next...

A 1-minute Book Series Trailer




Jonna Turek (J.B. Hawker author of The Bunny Elder Adventures) 

 

Lively glimpse into the lives of young ladies of an earlier era  --  This first book in the series gives a seemingly authentic view into historical New York.  Promoted as a young adult series, the story was entertaining to this not-so-young adult, as well.

Written in the present tense, with descriptions similar to stage directions, it is easy for the reader to picture the action and atmosphere as spunky, diminutive Violet goes about her many adventures, pushing the boundaries of her social class.  I can easily imagine this series becoming a favorite with a whole generation of readers.

Julie L. Sarff (Author of the Sweet Delicious Madness Series) 

 

Pleased to meet you, Violet Strange  --  This story is set in a very charming time period of the Gilded Age in New York.  Debutante Violet Strange has a problem, her father has disowned her sister for marrying the man she loved.  Ten years later, Violet decides to track down sister Theresa, only problem is Theresa does not want to be found.

A beguiling glimpse into the world of the very wealthy as well as the very poor, I have to admit I am a fan and will be reading more.



The Complete Series

The Violet Strange Mysteries are available as individual paperback books and as Kindle e-books via Amazon.com.  The complete e-book bundle is available for $8.99, offering a savings of nearly $16.00.

The stories are based on A.K. Green's 1914 short stories, but Candida Martinelli has completely re-imagined and re-written the stories for tweens, teens and adults today.  The original stories were less fleshed-out, and were written in stilted, Victorian English.  Candida Martinelli's series of tween length novels, or adult novellas, is written in simple, clear prose that is accessible to all readers, young and old.

The nine books in the series are about the highlights of Violet's detecting career, but it is not only Violet's life-experience that grows during the course of her work. Violet's heart grows too, to encompass friends she never imagined she would have befriended, and to discover the love of her life in a man she could never have imagined would return that love.

Links to the Series' Website and to the Books







A 5-Minute Book Premise Trailer




 

This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.