OYENTE

Brooklyn Book Buyer

  • 1
  • revisión
  • 0
  • votos útiles
  • 1
  • clasificación

Shadows of Rome—an appreciation

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-01-25

Reading like a novel, this many-faceted memoir courses through the last hundred years weaving the saga of a family with roots on both sides of the Atlantic. Its scion, the author David Downie, opens this singular tale searching the cemetery of a remote village in northern Italy, for the elusive tomb of his maternal grandfather, Alessandro Anzi. We learn that he had been a highly successful, larger-than-life figure, amassing a fortune then squandering it at gambling tables in Montecarlo. During World War I, he commanded a frontline detachment in the Alps. There, in the midst of brutal warfare, his aide-de-camp Alfredo invented Fettuccine Alfredo.

A few pages and a half-century later, we race up and down the hills of San Francisco with Alessandro’s effervescent daughter Romana, Downie’s mother. She’s at the wheel of a two-seater convertible, top down, radio blaring, her three young sons packed in, ecstatic as they fly along at twice the “stupid American” speed limit.

How did this free-spirited, quintessentially Mediterranean woman make a life on the laid-back coast of California? Downie recounts the wartime origins of a seemingly fated love story. A sobersided midwestern GI falls hard for a bewitching young artist barely out of her teens (see the book cover.) Their paths cross in Rome, her newly liberated hometown, in 1944. He, a newspaper man from Kansas and she, an art instructor covertly carrying messages for the Italian Resistance. Both have been in combat; both have risked and have witnessed death. But when they meet at an art class for American soldiers, the seeds of their life together are sown.

Downie has exhaustively researched this book, traveling to the lands of his forebears, unearthing ancient archives, combing through voluminous correspondence, deciphering forgotten photographs. His book also provides a valuable observation on the “war brides” phenomenon and the bicultural progeny that they raised. All in all, “Shadows of Rome”, packed with colorful anecdotes and astute commentaries, presents in factual historic context a baroque family epic that frequently and delightfully borders on the fantastic.

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

Has calificado esta reseña.

Reportaste esta reseña

adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_webcro805_stickypopup