Julia Savarese
Julia Savarese (born 1926) is an American writer. She was born in New York City.[1] After graduating summa cum laude from Hunter College in 1950, she worked as an editor for various publications.[2] Her novels include The Weak and the Strong (1952), which tells the story of an Italian-American family living in New York during the Great Depression, and Final Proof (1971), a novel about the death of a publishing empire.[3] She published several plays and received a Ford Foundation grant for playwriting. She also wrote for television, and in 1968 received the Hallmark Television Award.[2]
The Weak and the Strong was one of the earliest novels about growing up as the daughter of Italian immigrants; it defied the stereotypes of "happy-go-lucky" Italian family life.[4] When it was first published, critics called it "bleak," "unrelenting," and "humorless." In The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women (1985), Helen Barolini suggests that this was largely due to critics' expectations of Italian-American writers, and of women in particular; for a male writer such as Pietro di Donato, or an established woman writer such as Flannery O'Connor, she writes, "that kind of unsentimentality would be verismo of the highest order."[2] In 1974, Savarese was one of the few women included in Rose Basile Green's pioneering study of Italian-American writers.[1]
References
- Green, Rose Basile (1974). The Italian American Novel: A Document of the Interaction of Two Cultures. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 376–377. ISBN 9780838612873.
- Barolini, Helen. "Julia Savarese". The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women. Syracuse University Press. pp. 16–17, 209–212. ISBN 9780815606628.
- "Reader's Report". The New York Times. June 13, 1971.
- Hendin, Josephine G. (2008). Concise Companion to Postwar American Literature and Culture. John Wiley & Sons. p. 307. ISBN 9780470756386.
External links
Julia Savarese in libraries (WorldCat catalog)