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Blood Washes Blood: A True Story of Love, Murder, and Redemption Under the Sicilian Sun [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Frank Viviano (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 1, 2001
Against the sweeping backdrop of western Sicily, seasoned reporter Frank Viviano pieces together his own harrowing family legacy of betrayal and redemption -- and the truth behind a murder mystery and conspiracy of silence that spans four generations. His riveting seven-year quest is haunted, from cryptic beginning to stunning end, by an ancient Sicilian proverb, "Lu sangu lava lu sangu," "Blood washes blood": the torrent of unforgiving vengeance that flows from an unforgivable offense.

More than a century ago, Viviano's namesake and great-great grandfather, Francesco Viviano, was shot to death at a lonely rural crossroad in Sicily. He had been a revolutionary and a thief, a legendary bandit who traveled by night in the robes of a friar. Sicilians called him "the Monk."

Six months before his death in 1993, Viviano's ninety-six-year-old grandfather whispered to him the name of the Monk's killer: "Domenico Valenti." A name he had never heard before. A name that meant nothing to him.

Pursued by the demons of his own rootless life as a foreign correspondent, Viviano journeys to his family's ancestral village in Sicily. He sets out to unlock the mystery that killed the Monk and drove his family to America. But from his first day there, he is confronted by a maze of other interlocked mysteries, where everything -- names, identities, motives -- falls under the same enigmatic veil as his grandfather's final words to him.

The search eventually carries Viviano deep into the shadowy Sicilian netherworld, to the cataclysmic origins of the Mafia and the labyrinth of codes, blood feuds, family loyalties, and impenetrable silences that have defined the island's tortured historyfor a thousand years. Until past and present finally merge into a single story with a shattering climax.

A gripping family epic and relentless detective narrative, "Blood Washes Blood" is a deeply personal odyssey into the tangled roots of power, violence, and ultimately love. It holds a mirror to the past and, for one man, changes the way he views his family's evocative history, as well as himself.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In 1995, two years after his grandfather whispered the name of his great-great-grandfather's killer to him, Frank Viviano visited Sicily to learn the events that shaped his namesake's life and strongly influenced his own. Nicknamed "The Monk" for the garments he wore while robbing the rich and bureaucratic, Viviano's ancestor left little for the experienced foreign correspondent to follow. Plus, the slow-jolt journey of Sicilian lifestyles often ended in polite reticence or remarkable disorganization; even rudimentary information, such as his predecessor's gravesite, was lost. In a "morbid tidying up," Mussolini's local officials removed the remains of all pre-Fascists: "In their zeal to launch the new millennium, the fascisti hadn't bothered to keep lists of the disinterred. The old tombstones were dumped into the sea, next to the limestone blocks that the fishermen referred to as 'Atlantis.'"

In between assignments in Bosnia and the West Bank, Viviano learned to take a less direct approach. Guided by stories told to him in his childhood by his grandmother, he demystifies the region's bandit-rebel history, its current life under the sistema, and its creation of the modern Italian mafia. Viviano was already aware of his family's supposed connections to the mafia, causing him to look more carefully at the times that produced these men. In the process, he began to take a closer look at his own personal life:

The dramatic narrative of ancestry is not erased by immigration. It is driven into a clandestine realm where setting and characters are only dimly recalled, or transformed into fairy-tale heroes and villains in the landscape of fable. The Monk, in this sense, had withdrawn into my grandparents' tales and the isolated recesses of my imagination, into hidden canyons where I could not directly confront him.

Suspenseful and well balanced, Blood Washes Blood is an exciting and thoughtful page-turner, a remarkable story of family, mystery, and friendship. Viviano's writing is at its best when he follows the complicated trail of his family's past, and falters only slightly when he attempts to imagine his ancestor's life. --Karin Rosman

From Publishers Weekly

In a land steeped in family tradition, the rootless Viviano (a foreign correspondent for the San Francisco Chronicle) looks to uncover a family secret: how his great-great-grandfather, a man mysteriously known as "the Monk," was gunned down at a crossroads in rural Sicily more than a century earlier, the victim of an ordered hit. In search of answers, Viviano travels to his ancestral village of Terrasini. He soon discovers that when it comes to the island's history, there are always two competing versions of the truth: "one lies in the official past, the other in the folk memory and its poetic reincarnation in fable." His book echoes this sentiment as he intersperses the rather linear account of his investigation with a fictional re-creation of events supported by his findings. Each complements the other, and the book is further enriched as, over the course of his clearly weighty research, Viviano shares a portrait of Sicily and its inhabitants. Of particular interest and, as it turns out, importance are his discoveries about the origin of what has become most strongly associated with the island the mafia, or sistema del potere. Viviano is clearly fascinated by it, but his own experiences with carnage as a reporter keep him well clear of any Hollywood glorification. Rather, he traces its evolution as a brutal yet organic power structure in a land traditionally ruled by outsiders. Viviano's conclusions seem both well reasoned and enticing, as do the results of his inquiry into the story of his great-great-grandfather a search that comes to a particularly satisfying surprise ending. And while, in its purest form, the book is a solid piece of storytelling and reporting, its greatest strength may be that while it begins as a personal search, it ultimately reveals the history of a people. Agent, Amy Rennert. 5-city author tour. (May 8)Forecast: Viviano's unsentimental but poignant closeup of one Sicilian family and the role of the Mafia how it began and how different it has become will appeal to fans of the equally unsentimental but courageous TV program The Sopranos. His five-city author tour is sure to garner critical and popular attention.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Atria; 1ST edition (May 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671041584
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671041588
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,056,381 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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22 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Digging into Siciliy's Culture of Secrecy, August 2, 2001
By 
Susan Butterworth (Marblehead, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Washes Blood: A True Story of Love, Murder, and Redemption Under the Sicilian Sun (Hardcover)
The remarkable aspect of this book is that in his search for details of his great-great-grandfather's life and death, Frank Viviano goes beneath the surface of officially recorded facts to follow the trail of family secrets. Anyone who has searched for information about their Sicilian background knows that much is untold. Parents and grandparents carry their secrets to the grave. In order to discover the truth, it is necessary to read between the lines. Patience and a knowledge of Sicilian history and culture is essential. Frank Viviano has carefully gathered a wealth of background material that is revealing and useful for the reader who is trying to pursue a similar inquiry into family history.

This is fine non-fiction writing. The story unfolds with a certain drama, using the craft of writing to keep us reading well past bedtime! Perhaps the only weakness, in my opinion, is that more is revealed than need be about the author's own personal torments. Any information about an old girlfriend, for example, is irrelevant to the story. This is a minor flaw however. This book is superior to anything I have read about Sicily or searching for Italian roots.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars FANTASTIC!, May 30, 2001
By 
"kathymccabe" (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Washes Blood: A True Story of Love, Murder, and Redemption Under the Sicilian Sun (Hardcover)
I started reading this book one afternoon and I could not go to bed until I finished it. Mr. Viviano weaves a compelling story and you feel you are trying to solve his family mystery along with him. It is beautifully written and the author uses his sharp reporting skills to get ever detail just right. He illuminates many of the mysteries of modern Sicily and shines a light on its violent history. A MUST READ!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Haunting True Tale of Love, Passion and Murder in Sicily, May 23, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood Washes Blood: A True Story of Love, Murder, and Redemption Under the Sicilian Sun (Hardcover)
Blood Washes Blood deserves the acclaim and attention of such recent classics as MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL and UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN. Though Viviano's narrative is based on a true murder--that of his great, great Grandfather and namesake, this reads like the most gripping murder mystery. The reader is transported to Sicily and effortlessly travels back and forth in time to a land tainted with the blood of outlaw honor. The sense of place is evocative and heady, rich with the physical sensualness of Sicily. The denouement is a shocker that splits the whole, lush, cinematic story wide open and embues it with a deeply passionate intimacy. Viviano is a brave, gifted writer. This is one not to miss.
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First Sentence:
THE BIRTHPLACE OF MY GRANDPARENTS, of the bandit Francesco "the Monk" and the blur of generations before him, is a fishing village on the Gulf of Castellammare, twenty-five miles west of Palermo. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sistema del potere, figghiu miu, municipal records, washes blood
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Maria Santissima, New York, Domenico Valenti, Francesco Paolo Viviano, Padre Constantino, Monte Palmeto, Angelina Tocco, Francesco Viviano, Signore Zucco, United States, Giuseppe Viviano, Grandma Angelina, Piazza Duomo, Antonina Randazzo, Bandit Kingdom, Beati Paoli, Paolo Cocuzza, Toto Riina, Caterina Cammarata, Gulf of Castellammare, Giovanni Brusca, Maria Bommarito, Quattro Vanelle, Big Tom, Frank Viviano
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