
Description
Italian women don't always speak with their hands and cook with cheese. They use their eyes, legs, and fresh parsley too. They race around the kitchen, work a bunch of tasks at once, and get up after being knocked down. Then there's the penchant for silent energies, colors, and music of all genres being played through large living room speakers in 1984.
But growing up as an Italian-American girl is not always baked ziti and the loud yelling dramatized on the big screen. In Italian Bones in the Snow, Elaina Battista-Parsons shines light on a palpable spirituality, a quiet adoration of nature, and a habit of speaking up-particularly when it's modeled and deemed a survival skill. She explores the people and places in her life that stuck to her soul like candle wax. She celebrates pop culture, cemeteries, her boots, and 1980s nostalgia. Switching between prose and verse, she offers up real life stories about her relationship with Catholicism, winter weather, mental health, and men throughout her life.
Lyrical, poignant, and raw, these memoir shorts are all adorned in the unstoppable forces of nature called grandmothers, mother, and aunts. By the time you turn the last page, not only will you know Elaina better, but you'll also know yourself.
Product Details
Publisher | Vine Leaves Press |
Publish Date | February 22, 2022 |
Pages | 196 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781925965827 |
Dimensions | 7.0 X 5.0 X 0.5 inches | 0.3 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Italian Bones is a lyrical blend of free form poetry and essay-style memoir entries. Battista-Parsons' clever wording makes for vivid recreations of memories and food descriptions that make you hungry. Rich imagery teleports you from the kitchens of an Italian-American girl, to raw emotional explorations of beauty, love, and the difference between what we believe a woman should be and what a woman is. By the end of this memoir, I felt like I better knew the author, and better knew myself, as reading this reminded me of periods of my life as an Italian-American bambina. A must read to accompany bread and mozzarella Saturdays." Justine Manzano, author of Never Say Never
"If you're Italian-American, or even if you're not, be prepared for a sensual, passionate journey through the memoirs of a young woman's life. Filled with evocative images and details, Battista-Parsons' stories have viscerally broken through the snow. Her Italian bones and sensibilities are palpable throughout." Gleah Powers, author of Million Dollar Red
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