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Sometimes I Dream in Italian by Rita Ciresi β€” book cover

Sometimes I Dream in Italian

by Rita Ciresi
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Overview

Angel Lupo grew up in a traditional Italian home -- an exclusive club where Mama's word was everything...and where nice girls saved themselves for marriage. All Angel wanted was to be moviestar blond, change her name, and get as much attention as her prettier older sister Lina. Now Angel is nearing thirty, penning Catholic greeting cards for a living, and still jealous of her sister, who has a house in the suburbs, two kids, and a husband who loves her. So Angel does the next best thing: She answers a personal ad. Dirk Diederhoff is blond, teaches at Vassar, and is definitely not Italian. Nor is he the thrill-a-minute lover and soul mate Angel prays for. But as Lina, recklessly embarked on an affair of her own, would tell her: There are no perfect tens out there -- only men who want you to talk to them in Italian during sex. The award-winning author of Pink Slip gets the rituals and rhythms of domestic life just right in Sometimes I Dream in Italian, a bittersweet comedy about sisters, lovers, and a family that doesn't quite translate.

Synopsis

Angel Lupo grew up in a traditional Italian home — an exclusive club where Mama’s word was everything ... and where nice girls saved themselves for marriage. All Angel wanted was to be movie-star blond, change her name, and get as much attention as her prettier older sister Lina.

Now Angel is nearing thirty, penning Catholic greeting cards for a living, and still jealous of her sister, who has a house in the suburbs, two kids, and a husband who loves her. So Angel does the next best thing: She answers a personal ad.

Dirk Diederhoff is blond, teaches at Vassar, and is definitely not Italian. Nor is he the thrill-a-minute lover and soul mate Angel prays for. But as Lina, recklessly embarked on an affair of her own, would tell her: There are no perfect tens out there — only men who want you to talk to them in Italian during sex.

The award-winning author of Pink Slip gets the rituals and rhythms of domestic life just right in Sometimes I Dream in Italian, a bittersweet comedy about sisters, lovers, and a family that doesn’t quite translate.

New York Times Book Review

Simultaneously blunt and artful ... Ciresi has a lovely ear for dialogue and the ability to nail the details in descriptions that are both funny and painfully accurate.

About the Author, Rita Ciresi

Rita Ciresi is the author of Mother Rocket, which won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, and the novels Pink Slip and Blue Italian. She lives with her husband and daughter in Florida.

Reviews

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Editorials

New York Times Book Review

Simultaneously blunt and artful ... Ciresi has a lovely ear for dialogue and the ability to nail the details in descriptions that are both funny and painfully accurate.

St. Petersburg Times

Precisely crafted and compelling ... honest and witty.

Tampa Tribune-Times

Rita Ciresi has done it again. She’s written a book of fiction that wraps hopes and fears and lonesomeness and togetherness and gladness into one funny story after another.

USA Today

Poignant ... an old-fashioned tale about girls with old-fashioned dreams ... Angel and Lina will charm the reader.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In her novels Pink Slip and Blue Italian, Cirisi established herself as a resonant voice chronicling the lives of Italian-Americans. In this wry, charming second story collection, the recurrent character is Angelina Lupo, a daughter of Italian-American immigrant parents, who grows up in '60s and '70s New Haven, Conn. For Angel, life is rife with contradictions: strong family ties also means having her hands bound behind her back, as her overbearing mother attempts to keep her two daughters obedient and tractable. In "Big Heart" and "La Stella D'Oro," a prepubescent Angel learns the price some people pay for challenging tradition. "Babbo," Angel's father, is a hardworking soda-pop deliveryman who is too tired to pay much attention to Angel or her beautiful older sister, Lina, who is not afraid to rebel. Angel's admiration for and loyalty to her sister puts the younger girl in a bind during adolescence, when she becomes a kind of mediator in the conflicted family, afraid to hurt or anger her parents, but eager for Lina's approval. Each of these 12 linked stories offers new insight into Angel's difficult reckoning with her mixed feelings and her colorful family and heritage. Narratives told from the perspective of an adult Angel show her with Lina waxing nostalgic about their childhood while reluctantly taking on the roles of caretakers to their aging and ailing parent , and coming to terms with their own ambitions after the older generation dies. Angel is an immensely likable character whose self-deprecating and humorous reflections on family, men and careers is paired with imagery that deftly evokes all five senses. One doesn't have to be Italian to relate to Angel; she represents any contemporary woman poised between the values of her parents' generation and her own burgeoning sense of self. (Oct.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Library Journal

Ciresi's Pink Slip was definitely a fun read, but here the author shows her serious side. Each chapter covers a different period in the lives of two Italian American sisters, Angel and Lina. Starting with their childhood embarrassment at their immigrant parents, Ciresi captures perfectly life in a New York Italian American enclave. We follow Angel and Lina through their youth and into adulthood. Lina's teenage pregnancy leads her into an unhappy yet prosperous marriage. Angel has an uninspired job writing Catholic greeting cards yet dreams of the house and kids that her sister has. As Angel begins a serious relationship with a man she met though the personal ads, she is forced to confront her dreams head on. Will she marry a man who does not really make her happy in order to taste a slice of her sister's domestic life? A stirring novel about the pull of the past and the force of the future, this work is recommended for public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/1/00.]--Beth Gibbs, Davidson, NC Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\

Susser

[A] canny new book...Ciresi has a lovely ear for dialogue and the ability to nail the details in descriptions that are both funny and painfully accurate; the result is a book that manages to be simultaneously blunt and artful.
β€”New York Times Book Review

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2001
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780385334945

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