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If You Eat, You Never Die: Joyous and Heartbreaking Stories of First-Generation Italian American Family Life in Chicago

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In a neighborhood on Chicago's outskirts, Fabio and Lucia Comingo have built a new American life—and struggle to comprehend the influences that distract and change their restless young sons. Through this masterful evocation of a time and place, Tony Romano, the acclaimed author of When the World Was Young , brings a first-generation Italian American family vividly and poignantly alive in closely related tales at once joyous, heartbreaking, and honest. Weaving two dozen stories into a stunning, cohesive family history, Romano gives readers hope for togetherness amid the painful generational cycle of loss and redemption—as children grow and learn, and decide which treasures of cultural inheritance they will cherish.

257 pages, Paperback

First published December 20, 2008

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Tony Romano

12 books9 followers

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Niki.
72 reviews
June 24, 2011
There were so many stories in this book that reminded me of my life growing up among immigrant parents and extended family/community. I appreciated the changing voices in the different chapters. What I did not like was that the sons had issues with infidelity. It reminds me of the scene in Moonstruck when Olympia Dukakis asks why men cheat--because they fear death. It just pulled me out of the immigration narrative and into something that is all over our daily political and entertainment news. And there was no "real" crisis of identity in the sons' experience of it; the mother, on the other hand... that was more integrated into her very existence as an immigrant! (though, admittedly, not as important as food--but what is?)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for David.
Author 12 books150 followers
September 17, 2017
These are some solid stories. Nicely done. I like the bigger framework the book fits them into as well. Warm and focused.
Profile Image for Katy.
61 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2009
This book had really good intentions. I wanted to like it. I stuck it out to the bitter end, but unfortunately that's what it was: bitter.

The author is an Italian American whose parents immigrated to the US in the 60s. Each chapter is a vignette from their lives growing up in Chicago as immigrants and trying to make ends meet. I’m a sucker for that shit, but bouncing from narrator to narrator each chapter did little to help character development. I think had the author chosen one narrator (preferably himself) and divided the chapters by event it would have been more effective. As it was, it left me feeling like I was just reading words with no meaning.

I’m surprised. NPR’s Louisa Lim gushed about this book, and she’s super smart. Bad Louisa.
Profile Image for Lauren.
569 reviews
January 15, 2009
Similiar to Daniel Handler's Adverbs, but infinitely more readable, Romano's If You Eat, You Never Die is almost a series of short stories, told from the different perspectives of the different family members. The book progresses chronologically, but also haphazardly, and while the jumping can be distracting in a few stories, the characters themselves are so well developed it's worth having to flip around to figure out to whom the author is referring. I almost wished I was listening to an audiobook, the mother's Italian accent was so well written. I could almost hear her. And of course, I finished the book wanting to eat a big bowl of pasta with red sauce.
Profile Image for TalGarik.
38 reviews1 follower
June 16, 2012
broken-english and google-translated italian. Seven narrators guide us through the americanization of three generations of Italian-Americans, the broken-english of the title sounds authentic and it is full of promise, but the stories set in Italy fail to describe a reliable image of southern Italy in the nineteen-forties, but the irritating feature of the book is the broken-italian we have to meet every time Romano's characters speak Italian: "papers to sign" becomes "carta insegna" instead of the correct "documento da firmare" - Signor Romano gets paid for his writing, why is he behaving like a "dilettante"?
Profile Image for Elc.
10 reviews
July 21, 2012

Both funny and sad--especially moving at the end when a son recounts his mother's death. Romano's stories make me think that the lives of first-generation immigrants of all ethnicities aren't too different--that their children experience the same sorts of tension that pull between the old world (their parents' traditions and ways of doing things) and the new (the American one).
Profile Image for Brett Price.
16 reviews
August 7, 2013
A set of tales told by an array of narrators, this story will take you from the streets of Chicago to the fields of Italy in a story of family, marriage, and real life problems faced by immigrants and their children as they acclimate to the New World in Chicago.
3 reviews6 followers
March 22, 2009
Culturally interesting, but the characters are not especially developed, which I like prefer. Still worth reading, though.
Profile Image for Kipahni.
489 reviews45 followers
March 31, 2009
a four person narrative about an italian american family. each chapter has a distinct voice which makes this a good read.
Profile Image for Liz.
1,408 reviews9 followers
November 21, 2009
Lovely gutsy stories about 1st generation growing up in America.
Profile Image for Lwyatt.
11 reviews5 followers
May 17, 2012
So close to home! Great Italian story taking place in Chicago.
Profile Image for Tammy.
230 reviews
June 5, 2014
Each chapter is a little short story of this italian american family building a life in Chicago. An easy, entertaining read.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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