Agrodolce

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$16.00
Publisher
Bordighera Press
Publish Date
Pages
96
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.23 inches | 0.33 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781599541976

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Luisa Del Giudice, Ph.D. was born in Terracina (Latina), emigrated to Toronto in 1956, and has lived in Los Angeles since 1981. She is an Independent Scholar, has taught at various universities, and was Founder-Director of the Italian Oral History Institute in Los Angeles. She is internationally known for her work on Italian and Italian diaspora ethnology, folklore, and oral history. As an academic, public folklorist, and community activist, she has bridged many roles and audiences. She has edited numerous volumes, among which are: Sabato Rodia's Towers in Watts: Art, Migrations, Development (Fordham UP, 2014); On Second Thought: Learned Women Reflect on Profession, Community, Purpose (The University of Utah Press, 2017); TRIANGULATIONS WITHIN THE ITALY- CANADA-USA BORDERLANDS (Bordighera Press, 2020). In 2008, she was named an honorary Fellow of the American Folklore Society and Cavaliere by the Italian Republic.
Reviews
Luisa Giulianetti's Agrodolce is a stunning feast. Delicious in its abundant cascade of sense memories; its recipes blended with lore, loss, and love; intimacies whispered with tenderness and ferocity. These marvelous pages left me richly sated-and yet greedily hungry for more.

Elizabeth Rosner, Survivor Café


In her first superbly crafted offering, Agrodolce, Luisa Giulianetti displays a poet's and essayist's brilliance in her lyrical deconstruction of a bitter-sweet Italian American lifestyle. There is longing and devotion in her delving between the spaces of two disparate lands. Giulianetti displays a tangy, tactile sensibility to a love affair between motherhood and cross-cultural understandings. The old country is not finished, Agrodolce tells us. But the new one must change to accommodate its beauty and language. For Giulianetti, "food and cooking are love." The garden, the kitchen, the table, sites of history, tradition, and creation-all sacred. Sacred to this incredible work of literature.Indigo Moor, Everybody's Jonesin' for Something


Giulianetti's profoundly moving, bittersweet poetry honors her immigrant family. Whether recalling her Nonna gathering roadside finocchietto, her father's gardening wisdom, or lyrically paying homage to lemons ("nectared saffron suns tripping moonlight, falling to earth"), she warmly embraces the reader. Poignant but unsentimental, a lover of the kitchen but never housebound, Giulianetti brilliantly reaches beyond domestic joys and sorrows: "As you find the road/remember the North Star/homespun on a clothes line," she writes. Bringing us home, Agrodolce helps us find ourselves.

Maria Terrone, Eye to Eye


Luisa Giulianetti's Agrodolce is a breathtaking blueprint for how to live a good and full life. Rooted in her Sicilian heritage, this book not only contains poems about how to boil pasta, make proper coffee and cook caponata, but how to honor those who came before us, and how to love those surrounding us.

Sarah Kobrinsky, Nighttime on the Other Side of Everything