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When literary biographer and memoirist Louise DeSalvo embarked upon
a journey to learn why her father came home from World War II a
changed man, she didn't realize her quest would take ten years, and
that it would yield more revelations about the man-and herself-and
the effect of his military service upon their family than she'd
ever imagined. During his last years, as he told her about his
life, DeSalvo began to understand that her obsession with war
novels and military history wasn't merely academic but rooted in
her desire to understand this complex father whom she both adored
and reviled because of his mistreatment of her. Although she at
first believes she wants to uncover his story, the story of a man
who was no hero but who was nonetheless adversely affected by the
his military service, she learns that what she really wants is to
recover the man that he was before he went away. As DeSalvo and her
father uncover his past piece-by-piece, bit-by-bit, she learns
about the dreams of a working-class man who entered the military in
the late 1930s during peacetime to better himself, a man who wanted
to become a pilot. She learns about what it was like for him to
participate in war games in the Pacific prior to the war, and its
devastating toll. She learns about what it was like for her parents
to fall in love, set up house, marry, and have children during this
cataclysmic time. And as the pieces of her father's life fall into
place as works to piece together the puzzle of everything she's
learned about this time, she finds herself finally able to
understand him. Chasing Ghosts is an original contribution to the
understanding of working-class World War II veterans who did not
conventionally distinguish themselves through "heroic" actions and
whose lives were not until recently considered worthy of historical
or cultural attention. It personalizes the history of those sailors
who served in the Navy aboard aircraft carriers and on islands in
the Pacific prior to, and during World War II and contributes to
the current vital conversation about the often-unrecognized effects
of war and its traumas upon those men and their families. It
reveals the lifelong devastating consequences of military service
on those men and women who fell in love, married, and set up house.
And it reveals the complexity of what it is like to be the daughter
of a father who has gone to war.
WINNER OF THE IASA BOOK AWARD! AMERICAN BOOK AWARD WINNER! As the
child of children of immigrants, Louise DeSalvo was at first
reluctant to write about her truths. Her abusive father, her
sister's suicide, her illness. In this stunning collection of her
captivating and frank essays on her life and her Italian-American
culture, Louise DeSalvo centers on her beginnings, reframing and
revising her acclaimed memoiristic essays, pieces that were the
seeds of longer collections, to reveal her true power as a
memoirist: the ability to dig ever deeper for personal and
political truths that illuminate what it means to be a woman, a
second-generation American, a writer, and a scholar. Each essay is
driven by a complex inquiry that examines the personal, familial,
social, ethnic, and historical dimensions of identity.
Collectively, they constitute a story significantly different from
DeSalvo's memoirs when they first published, where the starkness of
their meaning became blunted by material surrounding them. DeSalvo
has also restored material written and then deleted-experiences she
was too reticent to reveal before, in writing about her sister's
suicide, her husband's adultery, her own sexual assault. The essays
also include new material to shift the ballast of an essay as her
life has changed significantly through the years. The House of
Early Sorrows is a courageous exploration not only of the DeSalvo's
family life and times, but also of our own.
In this inspiring book, based on her twenty years of research,
highly acclaimed author and teacher Louise DeSalvo reveals the
healing power of writing. DeSalvo shows how anyone can use writing
as a way to heal the emotional and physical wounds that are an
inevitable part of life. Contrary to what most self-help books
claim, just writing won't help you; in fact, there's abundant
evidence that the wrong kind of writing can be damaging.
DeSalvo's program is based on the best available and most recent
scientific studies about the efficacy of using writing as a
restorative tool. With insight and wit, she illuminates how
writers, from Virginia Woolf to Henry Miller to Audre Lorde to
Isabel Allende, have been transformed by the writing process.
"Writing as a Way of Healing" includes valuable advice and
practical techniques to guide and inspire both experienced and
beginning writers.
In a series of conversational observations and meditations on the
writing process, "The Art of Slow Writing" examines the benefits of
writing slowly. DeSalvo advises her readers to explore their
creative process on deeper levels by getting to know themselves and
their stories more fully over a longer period of time. She writes
in the same supportive manner that encourages her students, using
the slow writing process to help them explore the complexities of
craft. "The Art of Slow Writing" is the antidote to self-help books
that preach the idea of fast-writing, finishing a novel a year, and
quick revisions. DeSalvo makes a case that more mature writing
often develops over a longer period of time and offers tips and
techniques to train the creative process in this new experience.
DeSalvo describes the work habits of successful writers (among
them, Nobel Prize laureates) so that readers can use the
information provided to develop their identity as writers and
transform their writing lives. It includes anecdotes from classic
American and international writers such as John Steinbeck, Henry
Miller, Virignia Woolf and D. H. Lawrence as well as contemporary
authors such as Michael Chabon, Junot Diaz, Jeffrey Eugenides, Ian
McEwan, and Salman Rushdie. DeSalvo skillfully and gently guides
writers to not only start their work, but immerse themselves fully
in the process and create texts they will treasure.
In abundant variety, the work of Italian American women is gathered
together in one unique and provocative collection. Writers such as
Carole Mason, Sandra Gilbert, and Nancy Savoca speak on the complex
themes of ethnicity, family, and food in utterly surprising ways.
Debunking stereotypes and recasting traditions, they provide an
eloquent and daring redefinition of what it means to be an Italian
American woman.
This widely acclaimed memoir is a vivid account of a young Italian
American girl's struggle to transcend the limits imposed on her
life and documents the making of a working-class writer and
scholar.
During Louise DeSalvo's childhood in 1950s New Jersey, the kitchen
becomes the site for fierce generational battle. Louise's
step-grandmother insists on recreating the domestic habits of her
Southern Italian peasant upbringing, clashing with Louise's
convenience-food-loving mother; Louise, meanwhile, dreams of
cooking perfect fresh pasta in her own kitchen. But as Louise grows
up to indulge in amazing food and travels to Italy herself, she
arrives at a fuller and more compassionate picture of her own
roots. And, in the process, she reveals that our image of the
bounteous Italian American kitchen may exist in part to mask a
sometimes painful history.
From a land fraught with political and religious conflict comes
this testimony to the survival of the spirit. Engaged politically,
but also concerned with issues that confront women throughout the
world, the writers in this collection embody in their work the
interconnection of the personal and the political, the individual
and the social. Their voices, emanating from diverse backgrounds,
demonstrate the range and depth of contemporary fiction by Irish
women.
Just after Louise DeSalvo gave birth to her first child, her
husband confessed that he was having an affair. After surviving the
crisis in her marriage, she began to read and write about adultery
to explore the question of why people cheat. The result is this fun
and compassionate book that draws upon the lives and works of
literary figures such as Edith Wharton, Virginia Woolf, and Henry
Miller to offer a transforming understanding of infidelity and
marriage.
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