Fiercely loyal to the people she loved and terrifying to those who disappointed her, Teopista Marchi Rugani was a force to be reckoned with. Raised in the hills of Tuscany in the late 1880s, Pista gave birth to three children by three different men -- two were brothers and the third was her husband. Juggling all these men, she emigrated to Michigan's Upper Peninsula in the copper mining era and found life to be just as dramatic in America as it had been in Italy.
Based on the memoirs of Dr. Frank C. Rugani, this book recreates the story of his charismatic grandmother. While the Rugani men worked as struggling tenant farmers in Italy, exploited mining tremors in the Copper Country, and nervous suppliers to rural Michigan bootleggers during Prohibition, Teopista did whatever was required to hold the family together.
Readers may be surprised that nearly all of this story is true. It's classification as fiction is due to the need to fill in gaps where information was missing, and the creation of scenes to bring the story to life. The author hopes the story is as much fun to read as it was to write.
Quite the story, with local names of families that came here to the Copper Country as immigrants, to work in the mines and make a living here in America, including my maiden name and also the village mentioned, that my grandfather came from in Italy. I don't see Faustino on my family tree, though. I read it in one sitting, as it flowed well and I wanted to know what was next!
Page turner book about an Italian woman who "accidentally" ended up in the Copper Country of Michigan, with children from three different men (two of them brothers), and how her personality and persuasive skills guided their survival and eventually the destiny of her grandson.