![]() | thebookmaven: @JulieKlam Hee. Coming next, the Authors Read Each Other's Books Club...or is that already in progress? about 2 minutes ago |
![]() | ItzMisFit: I need some new books... Enjoy the TG vacay with one, my sangria or mascato, @4everBrandy music, and butter pecan ice cream. about 2 minutes ago |
![]() | hypnotic: RT @ByrneTofferings: it was a quite understandable choice at the time: milk, or charges for library books. I know what I'd have opted for. about 6 minutes ago |
![]() | Wombat37: @La_Que_Sabe Don't get confused, or you'll sip the cat, munch the books, read the whisky and snuggle the carrots. about 13 minutes ago |
![]() | technobabbled: @mgorka My Grandpa always asks me that when I'm reading kids books or comics. He used to be a librarian, so I always feel bad. >.> about 13 minutes ago |
| By Bobby Tanzilo Managing Editor E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Bobby Tanzilo |
| Published June 9, 2001 at 1:11 a.m. |
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There are plenty of books to be found about the Italian-American experience, if you look hard enough. But, admittedly, many are cookbooks with a bit of history and culture -- and gorgeous photographs -- tossed in. Others are little more than compendia of "wow" facts, such as books about inventions by Italians or collections of brief bios of famous Italian-Americans from Chef Boiardi (aka Boy-R-Dee) and Al Pacino to Lee Iacocca, Joe DiMaggio and Mario Cuomo.
That's what makes "Italian Culture -- A View from America," written by the father/daughter team of Peter and Sylvia Dorato, so interesting. This independently-published book isn't big and glossy and packed with photos of the rolling hills of Tuscany. It is, instead, the story of a family whose roots extend back into the Basso Monferrato area of Italy's Piedmon region and who made a new home in America.
The Doratos, who live in New Mexico, are well-respected engineers and so their softcover book has a special bent toward what they call "left-brained" Italians: mathematicians, scientists and engineers. Peter Dorato, whose parents were from the northwestern Italian region of Piedmont, grew up in a heavily Piemontese neighborhood in Manhattan and so the book also has a rare Piemontese angle.
You're not likely to find the book in Milwaukee shops (not many of us Piemontesi here, I'm afraid), but it can be easily ordered from TSI Press, 1514 Roma NE, Albuquerque, NM, 87106-4513, by faxing a request to (505) 291-0013 or by visiting the publisher's Web site.
Grillo dishes up fifth disc
Milwaukee singer Jerry Grillo launches his fifth CD, "Fever...and Other Symptoms," at a bash June 27 at the Hi-Hat Garage. Grillo and his band -- which includes Scott Currier, Steve Peplin, Kirk Tatnall and Randy Maio -- perform from 9 p.m.-midnight.
For more information on Grillo, the CD or the show, visit http://www.jerrygrillo.com.
Art in Flux
Flux Gallery hosts "Transmissions," drawings by Shana McCaw, June 15-25 and there's an opening night party from 6 p.m.-midnight featuring the music of The Bird Industry (with members of Mahogany Throttle). Visitors will also get a free copy of McCaw's new book of poems, "Quiz," at the event.
Flux Gallery, 901 E. Center St., in Riverwest, is open Fridays-Sundays. For more information, please call (414) 372-0401.
The Gift to Milwaukee
"The Gift," a unique traveling musical production, begins its summer performances June 22 and is available to community groups, festivals, fundraisers and other events through mid-August.
The show's libretto was written by director Michael Moynihan and is performed by Ivory Black, Abel Cruz, Winston Earl Wood and Michael Gudex. Alyssa Leighton's masks, puppets and sets enhance the show, as does the live musical score performed by One Drum with guest vocalist Annie Denison.
For more information on "The Gift," visit http://www.homestead.com/mkewi53207/gift.html.
Spoken/Unspoken
The Walker's Point Center for the Arts, 911 W. National Ave., hosts "Present In the Text," a piece first performed at Woodland Pattern Book Center last year. The work, which is a tapestry of performances by Bill Sell, Pegi Taylor, Lori Barian and Jennifer Holmes, will be presented in short excerpts on June 14, 8:30-10:30 p.m.
There will also be new works on hand by Chastity Washington, Mark Escribano and a collaboration by Allyson Bahr and Cinnamon Rossman. The performance will follow the 6 p.m. opening reception for the center's Annual Membership Show. For more information, call (414) 672-2787.
Swingin' at the Skylight
The Skylighters of Wisconsin host the annual "Skylight Night: Swing Time on Broadway," Sat., June 16, at the Broadway Theatre Center, 158 N. Broadway.
There will be coctails, hors d'oeuvres and a silent auction as well as songs and skits by Skylight Opera performers and students from Skylight's KidsWrites education program. There will, of course, be the always eagerly-anticipated annual Skylight Opera musical revue, written especially for this event each year. Afterward, enjoy an elegant dinner and finally, return to the Cabot Theatre to enjoy the upbeat sounds of Swing Nouveau.
Tickets are $175 per person or $2,250 for a corporate table. For reservations or further information, please call Sara von Hemert, (414) 291-7811.
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