Set on the West Side of Chicago during the 1940s and 1950s, Paper Fish is populated not by wiseguys or madonnas, but by working-class immigrants whose heroism lies in their quiet, sometimes tragic humanity. In her brilliant telling of the life and ultimate disintegration of three generations in an Italian American family, Tina De Rosa rebuilds this long-lost world with prose that is both breathtaking and profound.
At the center of the novel is young Carmolina, who is torn between the bonds of the past and the pull of the future - a need for home and a yearning for independence. De Rosa deftly interweaves Carmolina's story with the haunting stories of her family: Old Country memories and legends passed on by her devoted grandmother Doria; the courtship tale of her father, a policeman with an artist's soul, and her mother, a lonely waitress; and the painful story of Doriana, her beautiful but silent sister.
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New edition of "an extraordinary novel by the Zora Neale Hurston of Italian American Culture."
"Understated, lyrical and intensely imagistic, De Rosa's tale of Italian ghetto life stands out from other immigrant narratives by virtue of its artistry." --Kirkus
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Seller: Hay-on-Wye Booksellers, Hay-on-Wye, HEREF, United Kingdom
Condition: Poor. No jacket. Fading along spine and edge of boards. Gilt text on spine heavily rubbed. Gentle tanning to edges of text block. Contents clean and appear unread. Seller Inventory # 004910-7
Quantity: 1 available