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![The Queen of the Big Time : A Novel](http://images.amazon.com/images/P/1400060060.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg) |
The Queen of the Big Time : A Novel |
List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $15.72 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Adriana Trigiani fans will love this book.. Review: Once again Adriana Trigiani has written another gem of a book. The Queen Of The Big Time covers nearly 50 years in the life of Nella Castelluca., a young girl with big dreams of becoming a school teacher and leaving the farming life behind. Unfortunately, her plans had to change when her father was in an accident and Nella was forced to work in the local factory instead of continuing on with her education. While there, she meet Franco, a good man who wins her heart after it was broken when Renaldo, the love of her life, just up and left her.
The Queen Of The Big Time is a wonderful story about first love, true love, and making the most of what God has to give you.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A Warm and Heartfelt Story from a Very Talented Author Review: Some books, particularly romantic fiction, are like potato chips --- tasty little morsels that offer a brief but satisfying crunch. You don't expect them to satisfy your hunger but they'll do for the moment. Others are more like multi-course meals --- epic sagas that take you weeks to read and leave you feeling sated, if slightly overly full --- like a great dinner at an exclusive restaurant; you can't do it all the time, but when it happens, it's a memorable event.
Adriana Trigiani's THE QUEEN OF THE BIG TIME doesn't fall into either of these categories: it's the home-cooked meal no one makes quite like your Mom --- whether your Mom specialized in pot roast, baked ziti or arroz con pollo. Warm, satisfying and filling, without being overly rich, it's a book meant to be savored.
THE QUEEN OF THE BIG TIME tells the story of three generations of the Castelluca family, who live near Roseto, Pennsylvania. The novel centers on Nella Castelluca, her parents and her sisters, as they grow up on a farm outside of Roseto. Nella meets and falls in love with the most popular boy in town, Renato Lanzara. Renato's fondness for books and poetry match well with Nella's own love of learning, and it seems like a match made in heaven. Then, inexplicably, Renato leaves Nella and Roseto altogether, breaking poor Nella's heart. Four years later, just as Nella is about to start a new life with another man, Renato returns.
Trigiani's novel reads, in part, like a love letter to the immigrant families that settled in eastern Pennsylvania from Italy in the 1800s and worked hard to maintain their customs and way of life. The book takes its name from the town's biggest annual celebration --- "The Big Time" --- which is the Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, occurring every year in late July. The genuine warmth and affection the author feels for her characters --- including the town of Roseto --- clearly is reflected throughout the book, particularly in the care with which Trigiani handles all her characters.
There are a few missteps --- the novel's final sections feel much more rushed than the warm, leisurely pace with which the story opens, and early on in the novel Trigiani contextually includes several authentic recipes (sort of like an Italian-American LIKE WATER FOR CHOCOLATE) that suddenly stopped appearing, leaving me feeling a little cheated. But these elements, while mildly frustrating, are like a few lumps in the gravy: they don't really distract from the overall satisfaction the book brings and, ultimately, add to the "homemade flavor" of the book.
Fans of Trigiani's popular Big Stone Gap trilogy and LUCIA, LUCIA will find much to love in THE QUEEN OF THE BIG TIME, which similarly draws on the author's family history and background. Newcomers to Adriana Trigiani's work should thoroughly enjoy this novel as a fitting introduction to a talented author with a genuine affection for her roots. And who knows --- the novel may inspire some to visit its setting, the real Roseto, Pennsylvania (about 60 miles outside of Philadelphia) to see The Big Time, the celebration of the Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, held each year in Roseto during the third week of July.
--- Reviewed by Lourdes Orive
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Heart-Warming Story of Love and Loss Review: This engaging novel is set in Roseto, Pennsylvania, a town built by Italian immigrants as an exact replica of their hometown of Roseto Valfortore on the Adriatic Sea. This novel tells the life story of Nella Castelluca, the middle daughter of five, who lives on her family's small farm just outside of Roseto. Nella aspires to move away from the farm, live in town, and become a teacher. When Nella is 13, she gets her wish and is able to attend the high school in Roseto, where she excels at her studies. Shortly after she begins the school in town, Nella meets the mysterious Renato Lanzara and finds herself attracted to him. At first,Nella doesn't take her attraction to Renato seriously, because he is seven years older. Nella's father is badly injured in an accident, and Nella's loyalty to her family leads her to leave school and take a job in a blouse factory in town. Much to Nella's surprise, she also proves to be an excellent worker and manager, and is promoted to the position of forewoman in the factory when she is only 16 years old. Nella's old flame, Renato, begins paying serious attention to her, and Nella finds herself falling in love with him. But then Renator disappears from town, leaving Nella only a note that breaks her heart.
After some years, Nella marries Franco Zollerano, a good man who has been pursuing her since her first days at the blouse factory. Nella's first love Renato returns to town suddenly on the night before her wedding, leaving Nella very much surprised at his appearance after such a long absence. The story goes on, but I don't want to say any more to ruin your enjoyment of it. Nella's family overcomes a variety of tragedies, that at times seemed like more bad luck than one family should have to endure. The Castelluca family's ties are of course strengthened by every trial the family endures.
In spite of the somewhat maudlin story line, I really enjoyed this book. The enduring theme of the book is that real love never dies. The book was a moving, warm, and heartfelt tale.
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