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- Blood Washes Blood : A True Story
of Love, Murder, and Redemption Under the Sicilian Sun
by Frank Viviano
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- Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
In 1995, two years after his grandfather whispered the name of
his great-great-grandfather's killer to him, Frank Viviano visited
Sicily to learn the events that shaped his namesake's life and
strongly influenced his own. Nicknamed "The Monk" for
the garments he wore while robbing the rich and bureaucratic,
Viviano's ancestor left little for the experienced foreign correspondent
to follow. Plus, the slow-jolt journey of Sicilian lifestyles
often ended in polite reticence or remarkable disorganization;
even rudimentary information, such as his predecessor's gravesite,
was lost. In a "morbid tidying up," Mussolini's local
officials removed the remains of all pre-Fascists: "In their
zeal to launch the new millennium, the fascisti hadn't bothered
to keep lists of the disinterred. The old tombstones were dumped
into the sea, next to the limestone blocks that the fishermen
referred to as 'Atlantis.'"
In between assignments in Bosnia and the West Bank, Viviano learned
to take a less direct approach. Guided by stories told to him
in his childhood by his grandmother, he demystifies the region's
bandit-rebel history, its current life under the sistema, and
its creation of the modern Italian mafia. Viviano was already
aware of his family's supposed connections to the mafia, causing
him to look more carefully at the times that produced these men.
In the process, he began to take a closer look at his own personal
life:
- The dramatic narrative of ancestry is not erased by immigration.
It is driven into a clandestine realm where setting and characters
are only dimly recalled, or transformed into fairy-tale heroes
and villains in the landscape of fable. The Monk, in this sense,
had withdrawn into my grandparents' tales and the isolated recesses
of my imagination, into hidden canyons where I could not directly
confront him.
- Suspenseful and well balanced, Blood Washes Blood is an exciting
and thoughtful page-turner, a remarkable story of family, mystery,
and friendship. Viviano's writing is at its best when he follows
the complicated trail of his family's past, and falters only
slightly when he attempts to imagine his ancestor's life. --Karin
Rosman
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