Francine Masiello reads from The Tomb of the Divers: A Novel (Bordighera Press, 2024) Suzanne Uttaro Samuels reads from Seeds of the Pomegranate: A Novel (Sibylline Press, 2025)

Moving beyond tales of Southern Italian poverty and deprivation, The Tomb of the Divers weaves an immigrant yarn about small-time artists and crooks who, over the course of a century, wend their way from Basilicata to the anarchist enclaves of Paterson, New Jersey, and from Fascist Italy to Buenos Aires after Argentina’s Dirty War. This multigenerational story is told by Rosanna and Max, siblings locked in unreliable-narrative rivalry. Masiello takes as an organizing principle the confounding old Italian saying, “It’s not true, but I believe it.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seeds of the Pomegranate tells the story of Mimi Inglese, an Italian noblewoman in early twentieth-century Sicily. A talented painter, she dreams of escaping the rigid expectations of her class and attending the Palermo Art Academy. But when those ambitions are shattered, she and her family leave for New York City in search of a fresh start. Instead of opportunity, Mimi finds herself pulled into the dark underbelly of city life and her father’s money-laundering scheme, reluctantly contributing via her flair for forgery. Beset by turmoil in and outside the family, she must flee before she is trapped forever.

Discussion led by Siân Gibby, John D. Calandra Italian American Institute.

Emma and the Angel of Central Park, by Maria Teresa Cometto

A large crowd viewing a panel at the book launch of the English translation of Emma and the Angel of Central Park
Photograph courtesy of Maria Teresa Cometto

A well-attended book launch was held at the Istituto Italiano di Cultura on May 31 to celebrate the English translation of Maria Teresa Cometto’s new book Emma and the Angel of Central Park (2023 Bordighera Press). The book tells the amazing true story of Emma Stebbins and her path toward designing the famous Angel of the Waters statue for the park’s Bethesda Fountain. The statue is monumental achievement for a woman sculptor in any era, and it was all the more so in 1868. Cometto’s book is a delightful and informative read. The book is available here and here, among other booksellers.