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"Varina Palladino's Jersey Italian Love Story is fun and funny,
wonderfully exuberant, and incredibly wise. These endearing
characters--their voices and stories-- will be with me for a long
time to come. I didn't want to say good-bye." -Jill McCorkle, New
York Times bestselling author of Hieroglyphics An utterly
delightful and surprising family drama--think Moonstruck and My Big
Fat Greek Wedding set in New Jersey--about a boisterous,
complicated Italian family determined to help their widowed mother
find a new boyfriend. Lively widow Varina Palladino has lived in
the same house in Wyldale, New Jersey, her entire life. The town
might be slightly stuck in the 1960s, when small businesses thrived
and most residents were Italian, but its population is getting
younger and the Palladinos are embracing the change. What Varina's
not embracing, much to her ninety-two-year-old mother's dismay, is
dating. Running Palladino's Italian Specialties grocery, caring for
her mother, and keeping her large, loud Jersey Italian family from
killing one another takes up all of Varina's energy anyway. Sylvia
Spini worries about her daughter Varina being left all alone when
she dies. Sylvia knows what it is to be old and alone, so when her
granddaughter, Donatella, comes to her with an ill-conceived plan
to find Varina a man, Sylvia dives in. The three men of the
family--Dante, Tommy, and Paulie--are each secretly plotting their
own big life changes, which will throw everyone for a loop. Three
generations of Palladinos butt heads and break one another's hearts
as they wrestle with their own Jersey Italian love stories in this
hilarious and life-affirming ode to love and family.
A whimsical, moving novel about a retirement home for literary
legends who spar, conjure up new stories, and almost magically
change the lives of the people around them. Alfonse Carducci was a
literary giant who lived his life to excess-lovers, alcohol,
parties, and literary rivalries. But now he's come to the Bar
Harbor Home for the Elderly to spend the remainder of his days
among kindred spirits: the publishing industry's nearly gone but
never forgotten greats. Only now, at the end of his life, does he
comprehend the price of appeasing every desire, and the
consequences of forsaking love to pursue greatness. For Alfonse has
an unshakeable case of writer's block that distresses him much more
than his precarious health. Set on the water in one of New
England's most beautiful locales, the Bar Harbor Home was
established specifically for elderly writers needing a place to
live out their golden years-or final days-in understated luxury and
surrounded by congenial literary company. A faithful staff of
nurses and orderlies surround the writers, and are drawn into their
orbit, as they are forced to reckon with their own life stories.
Among them are Cecibel Bringer, a young woman who knows first-hand
the cost of chasing excess. A terrible accident destroyed her face
and her sister in a split-second decision that Cecibel can never
forgive, though she has tried to forget. Living quietly as an
orderly, refusing to risk again the cost of love, Cecibel never
anticipated the impact of meeting her favorite writer, Alfonse
Carducci-or the effect he would have on her existence. In Cecibel,
Alfonse finds a muse who returns him to the passion he thought he
lost. As the words flow from him, weaving a tale taken up by the
other residents of the Pen, Cecibel is reawakened to the idea of
love and forgiveness. As the edges between story and reality blur,
a world within a world is created. It's a place where the old are
made young, the damaged are made whole, and anything is
possible....
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