000 02782cam a2200253 a 4500
001 022404
005 20231009193340.0
008 080417s2002 mau 000 0aeng
010 _a 2001001244
020 _a9780807072455
082 1 _a92 MER
100 1 _aMerullo, Roland
245 1 0 _aRevere Beach elegy :
_ba memoir of home and beyond
_c/ Roland Merullo
260 _aBoston
_b: Beacon Press
_c, c2002.
300 _a214 p.
_c; 22 cm.
520 3 _aIn Revere Beach Elegy, Roland Merullo returns to his childhood heaven of Revere, Massachusetts, to begin an intricate, impressionistic portrait of his rich and complex life. The tough codes of Revere's working-class streets mix with the warmth and affirmation of family -- forty cousins, grandparents, aunts and uncles -- to form a background against which Merullo's later wanderings are always set. In one of the most indelible portraits in American literature by a son, Merullo writes of his first-generation Italian-American father, a man whose drive and pride serve as both lasting inspiration and crucible for his oldest son. Merullo is plucked from the Revere public schools to become a scholarship boy at St. John's Prep, then the elite Exeter Academy, where his trajectory toward "something softer and richer, something said to resemble success" has its shaky beginning. After graduating from the Ivy League, Merullo travels to the USSR, and there, in his encounters with two Russian friends, he witnesses a kind of loyalty and grit that even Revere hadn't shown him. He serves in the Peace Corps as a volunteer on a tiny atoll in Micronesia, where the onset of a tropical illness is no more of a plague than his gnawing sense of ineptitude and failure. Back in America, he works as a Boston cabbie, falls in love, and sinks toward poverty as he pursues his dream of publishing a novel. Years later, having published three novels and settled in rural western Massachusetts, Merullo travels to Italy with his wife, mother, and young daughter. There, the difficulties of travel vanish for a moment in a taste of the sacred; long-lost parts of his heritage and simple encounters with human generosity cross lines of nationality and class and resolve themselves into flashes of pure grace. Together, these episodes form a daring and heartrending spiritual autobiography, one in which place, class, and family are as critical as prayer. Book jacket.
600 1 0 _aMerullo, Roland
_x-Homes and haunts
_z-Massachusetts
_z-Revere
600 1 0 _aMerullo, Giuseppe (1916-1982)
650 4 _aItalian Americans
_v--Biography
650 0 _aNovelists, American
_x-20th century - Biography
651 0 _aRevere (Mass)
_x-Intellectual life
_z-20th century
651 0 _aRevere (Mass)
_x-Social life and customs
942 _cMO
999 _c267074
_d267074