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reviewsInnocent War
Susan Violante In the opening pages of Susan Violante’s “Innocent War,” Violante tells that reader that, “I wrote a book to get to know my father, and in the process I got to know myself. This didn’t come without hardship, loneliness, disappointment, and frustration as I set myself to break the circle of silence between parents and their sons and daughters. I was clear in my quest. I convinced my father to tape his accounts so that I could transcribe them and leave his legacy to his grandchildren. My goal of getting to know my dad was achieved at the very moment I got the tapes. Little did I know that listening to them would bring so many other quests and dreams.” (p. xiii) When Violante sat down and listened to the tapes she realized that she couldn’t just keep the story in her family; her father Nino’s story was so powerful that she needed to share it with the world. So, this is how “Innocent War,” Book 1 in the “Behind an Immigrant’s Past Series” came to fruition and I, for one, am glad that she shared his adventures. The story is told through a young boy’s point of view and is a book that once you pick up you will be unable to put down. I thoroughly enjoyed reading about Nino and his family’s life throughout WWII. It was a neat perspective to look at the situations from a child’s point of view and I learned a lot relating to the history of the time period. Other than some editing issues, “Innocent War” is an excellent work that I would highly recommend. Violante successfully takes an era out of a history book and brings it to life in a way that is interesting and at the same time educational. I could see “Innocent War” being part of a high school/college history class curriculum. It would supplement a textbook nicely by bringing real faces and stories to the events of that time period. I greatly look forward to reading the next installment in the “Behind an Immigrant’s Past Series.” I am truly enjoying Nino’s story and can’t wait to see where he and his family go from here. |
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