Romance
Date Published: 6/11/20
Publisher: Black Rose Writing
This is the love story to end all love story’s! 1977, the most tumultuous year in New York City’s history. In a place called Bensonhurst, a young Italian-American fighter named Anthony Marino meets his love in Romeo and Julie disco on 86th Street. Gia steals his heart away, and through tremendous trials and tribulations, their love survives. A modern Shakespearean tale that pulls on every heart string we possess.
Chapter 1
Opened Hydrants
This would be a summer for the ages; our
youthful existence was celebrated like never before! Fanciful cinemas were
brimming with wicked storm troopers and adorable droids who took us on a
whimsical journey to galaxies far, far away, and although the King was laid to
rest, music still reigned supreme. A ghostly executioner took his maniacal orders
from the neighbor’s canine, while three beauties, along with a guy named
Charlie, were fighting crime right in our very own living rooms. A computer
named after a common fruit was coming home with us, while we were glued to our
sets for an entire week over something called a miniseries that rightly opened
our eyes. The lights did go out on Broadway, and yes, Virginia, the Yankees did
conquer the universe again. It was a wondrous time, like none other. Mine was a
turbulent adventure with such highs and lows as few lives have ever
experienced. It was also an enduring conflict between what some claimed was an
act of indomitable courage, yet others witnessed a profound doubt.
But, let me not get ahead of myself. This
spectacle took place in the scintillating county of Kings during the tumultuous
summer of 1977. During those sizzling months, I experienced triumphs, agony,
fear, and a mythic love affair that had no end. This is also the story of the
first time I died, and it went something like this…
My name is Anthony Marino, but everyone
in my neighborhood called me
“Ant.” I’m sixteen years old, born, and
bred in the rough and tumble neighborhood of Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. For those
of you who are not familiar with my hometown, my friends and I call it Guineasville
( only we Italians can call each other
a guinea and get away with it). In other words, in this neighborhood of
ours, it’s not whether you’re Italian; it’s merely from what part of the boot
your family hails?
I am the second faithful son of Saverio
and Rosalina, prideful people who emigrated from Taormina, Sicily. My parents
met as young teenagers, married and traveled to America ( sounds
like a movie, doesn’t it? ). My mother was the dutiful housewife. A
fanatical homemaker who would be mortified if you ever caught her without the
beds being made, the furniture dusted, and fresh vacuum marks on all the
carpets. There was always a pot of sauce gently simmering on the stove, its
bouquet greeting you as you entered the front door — and a maganette ( espresso pot) steaming away, its
mocha-like aroma declaring the humble brilliance of our home.
Everyone in my neighborhood knew my
father; he was the finest example of a dying breed of ancient artisans, known
around these parts as stonemasons. He was short, stout, yet a giant in stature.
His complexion was dark enough that many mistook him for an Arab. My father was
always working; he didn’t understand the word should; I think it might have
made him a happier person.
My older brother Sal worked with my father,
but he disliked it. What I really meant was that he hated it. Well, maybe
that’s a little strong. Instead, working with the old man revealed everything
Sal loathed about himself yet lacked the courage to face. You see, my brother
Sal was the kind of person who, when asked, took five minutes to decide whether
or not he wanted pepperoni on his pizza. Just the other night, he told me a
secret I realized would devastate my father. I lay in bed and struggled with
it. I wish he didn’t tell me, but I understood this would change Sal and the
family forever.
About the Author
Known worldwide as a celebrity chef, David Ruggerio’s life-story is one of redemption, sacrifice, and a new lease on life as an award-winning genre fiction writer.
Ruggerio rose to the position of top chef at the famous La Caravelle in New York by age 25. He went on to take command of Pierre Cardin's New York outpost of Maxim's de Paris, where he garnered three stars from The New York Times. In 1995, Robert Mondavi, the note vintner, named him one of the thirteen best young chefs in America.
With two acclaimed cookbooks under his belt, David Ruggerio became known as a "Super Chef" and was called for television guest spots that quickly became opportunities. He hosted the iconic TV shows Ruggerio to Go on the Food Network, and Little Italy with David Ruggerio on PBS. Throughout his outstanding career as a chef, Ruggerio cooked for five US Presidents.
Today, Ruggerio lives on the East Coast and spends his days writing mostly genre fiction. He is an Amazon bestselling author and the recipient of the Maxy Award for Best Horror 2019 for his debut horror novel, A Wistful Tale of Gods, Men and Monsters. His second book of fiction, Say Goodbye and Goodnight, releases June 2020.
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