Maria Laurino

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Born
Plainfield, New Jersey, The United States
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Member Since
September 2008


Maria Laurino is the author of Old World Daughter, New World Mother: An Education in Love and Freedom (W.W. Norton, 2009) and Were You Always an Italian?, a national best-selling memoir about ethnic identity. A former chief speechwriter to NYC Mayor David Dinkins and a staff writer for the Village Voice, Laurino’s work has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, The Nation, Salon.com, and numerous publications. She also co-wrote, with Michael Imperioli, an episode in Season Four of The Sopranos. Her essays have been widely anthologized, including in the Norton Reader.


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Average rating: 3.83 · 509 ratings · 72 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Price of Children: Stol...

3.66 avg rating — 213 ratings6 editions
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Were You Always an Italian?...

3.85 avg rating — 143 ratings — published 2000 — 9 editions
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The Italian Americans: A Hi...

4.23 avg rating — 122 ratings — published 2014 — 7 editions
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Old World Daughter, New Wor...

3.33 avg rating — 30 ratings — published 2009 — 4 editions
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And there were red geranium...

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Prosecuting Jennifer Levin'...

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BY Laurino, Maria ( Author ...

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AND THERE WERE RED GERANIUM...

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“At the heart of being a second-generation American meant feeling the shame of your heritage and the sting of family betrayal, creating an inner turmoil from which one never fully escaped.”
Maria Laurino, The Italian Americans: A History

“It seems a lost opportunity that Capra didn’t give George Bailey, or the Giannini-inspired idealistic bank president in his film American Madness, an Italian surname. The next time a great Italian-American filmmaker, one who established his career in San Francisco, would portray a member of the community, the character would be the fictional antihero Vito Corleone, whose name would penetrate the nation’s collective memory far deeper than that of A. P. Giannini.”
Maria Laurino, The Italian Americans: A History

“Becoming American meant rejecting one of the two worlds. It meant trying to hide the grease stains saturating the paper in which your school lunch of a fried potato and egg sandwich on crusty bread was wrapped, while the rest of your classmates ate ham on white bread with mayonnaise.”
Maria Laurino, The Italian Americans: A History

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