Description
Review by, Author Bud Monaco, and Publisher of Sopro Books. Review for the Italian American Heritage Foundation Newsletter
I highly recommend this novel but the recommendation comes with a caveat. Many of us whose parentage hails from the south of Italy and whose ancestors arrived in America before the Second World War have a tendency to romanticize the old country. This book shatters that impression of sweetness and beauty. The book might startle you with its explicit scenes of violence. Decker's descriptions of the life in Sicily and Naples is far from lovely. Actually, it's quite horrifying. The extreme poverty, mafia rule, unpoliced violence, ongoing vendetta, the absence of schools and medical care all combined to make life there impossibly challenging.
The Tomaso family, however, will endear itself to you. The love the family holds for one another and for their faith balances the surrounding evil but certainly does not sugar coat it. The family had to leave Sicily. Their lives depended upon it. They ended up in Chicago's Little Sicily, known locally as Little Hell.
Sadly, here they found gangsters working hand-in-hand with crooked cops, they found deep-seated prejudice against them, more vendetta and people being gunned down in the street with no police interventions. This was Chicago of the Roaring 20's, Al Capone's Chicago. The Tomaso family landed in an ugly place indeed.
The family once again finds themselves in survival mode. They realize that here, unlike in Italy, if they can get through this transition, there is a future for their children. It's all about sacrificing so their children can have an education and a future. There are schools for all and doctors when they need them. There is light at the end of the tunnel.
Author: Steven Decker
Publisher: Cambridge Street
Published: 12/17/2017
Pages: 368
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.08lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.76d
ISBN13: 9780692978474
ISBN10: 069297847X
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Historical | General
About the Author
Author Steven Decker grew up in a large, thriving Sicilian family on the north side of Chicago. He never forgot the family stories about the struggles of his immigrant grandparents: how they survived terrible poverty, life during Prohibition and their encounters with gangsters. He has woven many of those true events into an exciting fictional tale spanning a half century. "Cambridge Street is for the millions of immigrants from Italy and the world that came to America to give their families better lives," said Decker. "They helped build our country, feed its people and fight its wars. Now, with the passing of years, their bravery and sacrifices are being forgotten. We must not let that happen."
This title is not returnable

