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OverviewIn Maria Giura's If We Still Lived Where I Was Born, the narrator unlocks the meaning she's made of her childhood and heritage, spirituality and lost loves and draws the reader in to retrieve their own. The collection begins in the apartment above her parents' Brooklyn pastry shoppe where she imagines them still fighting, still making us, still together, then shifts to adulthood where she learns to stay still long enough to listen for the story, and then returns to childhood where her mother and aunts teach their kids to spread out their blankets and live. Moving between New York and Italy, between family and ""stranger,"" these poems show longing and vulnerability, but also the thrill of being young and part of something larger than oneself, of making peace, and pursuing the path you were meant to. They brim with the people and places that have taught her the most and ring with pathos and celebration, from her immigrant father waiting for her on the corner . . . bread in his hand to the sister who pulled the music out of her, helped her make her own song. Beginning with a journey to a literal birth place and extending outward to many figurative places of self-discovery, this collection explores what lasts when all else passes away. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Maria GiuraPublisher: Bordighera Press Imprint: Bordighera Press Volume: 188 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.163kg ISBN: 9781599542430ISBN 10: 1599542439 Pages: 114 Publication Date: 04 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe best poetry takes you back to the things you know. In this collection, Giura takes us on a tour of an American landscape while showing us how much we have in common-you'll find people you recognize and glimpses of yourself. You'll hear Mario Lanza...singing in the stereo and smell Joy in a kitchen on 84th Street. Through these finely crafted poems, Giura reminds us of what is good and what it means to endure what isn't, and she does so with a universality that invites the reader in and with a voice that is to be trusted and admired.-Kevin Carey, Junior Miles and The Junkman, Set in Stone and Jesus Was a Homeboy In this collection, Giura skillfully weaves between the particular place and time of her youth to present day, eventually making her way back to her parents' ancestral villages in Italy. From a Sunday meal that becomes a holy experience to Aunt Rose combing the ocean out of [her] hair, Giura's poems are empathetic, evocatively drawn portraits. A wise and captivating collection.-Jennifer Romanello, contributor, And There Were Red Geraniums Everywhere: Women's voices of the Italian diaspora in North America If I had to use only one word to describe this collection, it would be grace. It's grace that allows Giura to write the past with wisdom, forgiveness, and playfulness, masterfully leading us through the front door of her childhood home, into the bakery where her parents toiled and out the back door to love and heartbreak, connection and healing. Sharp and delicate like her mother's good crystal . . . filled with burgundy wine, these poems will stay with you long after the last sip.-Julia Paul, Table With Burning Candle, Staring Down the Tracks and Shook Author InformationMaria Giura is also the author of Celibate: A Memoir, which won a 1st place Independent Press Award, and What My Father Taught Me. An Academy of American Poets winner, Giura has been published in several journals including New York Quarterly, Prime Number, I-70, Liguorian, Presence, Midstory, PLR, Italian Americana and Voices in Italian Americana. She received her PhD in English from Binghamton University and teaches writing workshops for Casa Belvedere Cultural Foundation. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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