Three Dreamers
A Memoir of Family
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- R$ 29,90
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- R$ 29,90
Publisher Description
“As nourishing as a three-course Italian feast, this is a fierce, moving tribute to the ties that bind.”—People (Book of the Week)
The #1 New York Times bestselling author of Sleepers offers a heartfelt homage to the women who taught him courage, kindness, and the power of storytelling: his mother, his grandmother, and his late wife.
Standing with his children near his grandmother’s grave on a recent trip to Ischia, an island off the coast of Naples, Lorenzo Carcaterra realized how much of his life has been shaped by the women who taught him how to look for joy and overcome sorrow. This book is his tribute to them.
Nonna Maria, his grandmother, gave him his first taste of a loving home during the summers he spent with her as a teenager on Ischia. With her kindness, her humor, and the same formidable strength she employed to make secret trips for food when the Nazis occupied Ischia during World War II, she instilled in him the importance of community, providing shelter for a boy whose home life was difficult.
His mother, Raffaela, dealt with daily hardships: a loveless and abusive marriage, the burden of debt, and a life of dread. Though the lessons she taught were harsh, they would drive Lorenzo from the world they shared to the better one she always prayed he would find.
The third woman is his wife, Susan, a gifted editor and his professional champion. Their marriage lasted three decades before her death from lung cancer in 2013. While their upbringings were wildly different, their love and friendship never wavered—and neither did her faith in Lorenzo’s talent and potential as a writer.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Carcaterra (Sleepers) pays a moving tribute to his grandmother, mother, and wife in this heartfelt account of how they shaped him. A fearless advocate for her family during the Nazi occupation of Naples in WWII, Carcaterra's "Nonna" Maria lost a son during the invasion and, through her resilience, taught him about courage, forgiveness, and generosity. His mother, Raffaela, however, "presented me with a different picture," Carcaterra notes. She stayed married to an abusive husband who'd murdered his first wife and cheated countless people, and her "words to me, sometimes kind, often bitter, gave fuel to my desire to live as far from such misery as possible," Carcaterra writes. In 1976, while working at the New York Daily News, Carcaterra met the third woman who would profoundly impact his life: Susan Toepfer, a brilliant editor who became his wife of three decades and mother of his two children. In the book's introduction, Carcaterra reveals that Susan died from the same cancer that took his mother's life. With spare yet resounding prose, Carcaterra follows these women from his childhood home in Hell's Kitchen to the Italian island of Ischia, to the battles each of them fought at the end of their lives. This emotional narrative isn't for the fainthearted, but its beauty is a thing to behold.