It's a shame this book is such sloppy history, because the topic is certainly interesting. But the authors put the reader on notice early on in the book with a few howlers- for example, claiming that Spartacus' revolt was due to the oppression of southern Italy by Rome (possibly they were thinking of the Social War?)- and this looseness with facts continues throughout the book. (Italian-Americans only served in the Pacific theater in WWII unless they were working with OSS? Really?) Also, both the World Wars together get only half a page, and Enrico Fermi doesn't even get a name drop. For a book published in the 1990s claiming to cover five centuries of the Italian-American experience, I'd say those are major omissions.