Synopses & Reviews
The Whale Chaser is the story of Vince Sansone, the eldest child and only son in a large Italian-American family, who comes of age in 1960s Chicago. A constant disappointment to his embittered father—a fishmonger who shows his displeasure with his fists—Vince finds solace by falling in love. Classmate Marie Santangelo, the neighborhood butcher’s winsome daughter, entices him with passionate kisses and the prospect of entering her family’s business. Yet he pursues Lucy Sheehan, an older girl with a “reputation,” who has also been victimized by the adults in her life.
When Vince abruptly flees Chicago he ends up in Tofino, a picturesque fishing town on the rugged west coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia. First he works gutting fish, then is hired by Tofino’s most colorful dealer, Mr. Zig-Zag, and joins the thriving marijuana trade. Ultimately, through his friendship with Ignatius George, an Ahousaht native, he finds his calling as a whale guide.
Vince must come to terms with the consequences of his actions as well as his family’s version of la storia segreta, the unspoken story of how his grandfather, like thousands of other Italians and Italian-Americans, was evacuated from prohibited zones on the West Coast and, along with hundreds of others, interned in a prison camp after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Set in the turbulent decades of the Vietnam War and the drug and hippie counterculture, The Whale Chaser is a powerful story about the possibility of redemption.
Review
"A remarkable literary achievement that will likely prove the definitive novel of the massive Sicilian immigration to the United States in the early 1900's." (Sicilia Parra)
Review
"The author must have sat at the knees of beloved grandmothers and aunts to learn these tales....At the end we feel we've sat at the table of a family that has lived the transformation of the Old World into the New in every fiber of their bones."--Thomas Simpson,
Chicago Tribune"Lusty, whimsical, and reverent...Like tributaries into a slow and relentless river, [the Santuzzus'] stories merge with Old World folk tales, Catholic miracle lore and the darker realities of American history."--Dan Carpenter, The Indianapolis Star
"Robust, beguiling...rich with fable and folklore and religion."--Publishers Weekly
"Fascinating...reads as if told by ghosts around an open fire."--Library Journal
Review
“The Whale Chaser is a masterful merger of history, metaphor and metaphysics, explanation and confession. Ardizzone's eye, ear and recollection are incredible. . . . His precise language more than describes; it turns scenes of both violence and love into incredible experiences.” —David Bradley, author, The Chaneysville Incident and winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction
Review
“[Ardizzone] has a knack of saying out loud what you’ve always felt and never put into words. . . . Through sin, redemption, death and resurrection, Ardizzone’s latest goes deep into the 1960s and ’70s to give us a tale worthy of our attention.” —Fred Gardaphé, author of From Wiseguys to Wise Men
Review
“A sumptuous and inspirational read. . . . With The Whale Chaser Ardizzone has achieved his masterpiece, and at the same time—off-handedly, with true sprezzatura—one of the two or three greatest novels ever of the Italian American quandary.” —John Domini, author of Earthquake I.D.
Review
“Ardizzone’s latest novel stretches over decades and miles, from the crowded North Side of Chicago to the haunting waters of British Columbia. The book sends home the complicated, elusive beauty of the struggle toward self-comprehension—with insights as illuminating and breathtaking as a whale’s sudden breach.” —Angela Pneuman, author of Lay It on My Heart and Home Remedies
Review
“This lyrical, engaging novel is sensual, suspenseful, and full of crackling life. Tony Ardizzone, above all, is a marvelous chronicler of the joys of being alive. There’s plenty of peril too, and suspense, the human tragicomedy in all its nuanced complexity.” —Christine Sneed, author of Little Known Facts and Paris, He Said
Synopsis
In the Garden of Papa Santuzzu is a magical, warm, and wise novel about a close-knit family's immigration from Sicily to America in the early 1900s. Wanting more for their children and grandchildren than a lifetime of servitude in the fields of a tyrannical Sicilian landlord, Papa Santuzzu and his wife, Adriana, push their seven sons and daughters, one by one, to immigrate to La Merica, a land of promise and opportunity. Here is a rich and vibrant novel about the stories families tell each other, stories that make up a deeply personal and a common history.
About the Author
Tony Ardizzone, a native of Chicago, is the author of six previous books of fiction, including In the Garden of Papa Santuzzu and The Evening News. His writing has received the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, the Pushcart Prize, the Chicago Foundation for Literature Award for Fiction, and the Milkweed Editions National Fiction Prize, among other honors. He lives in Portland Oregon.