Sunday, December 31, 2023

Things for which I am thankful as 2024 arrives.


Thankful that the family not only survived Covid, we emerged stronger and closer than when we entered it.


Thankful for the restraint to resist donuts. I'm also thankful that this gustatory restraint does Not carry over to chocolate.


Thankful that our local Costco consistently opens their doors 15 minutes earlier than posted, because I can get in, grab my 4-5 things, and get out before the store officially opens. No joke, a 15-minute venture in and out of that maze of temptation.


Thankful that I'm healthy enough to endure all the walking that Ghost Dog and I like to do. Sure, my feet and knees are not pristine, they have their ailments, but I'm healthy enough to remain abundantly ambulatory.


Thankful for blueberry pancakes and hot chocolate. I'm also thankful they're not staples of my diet, as that kind of recurring caloric deluge would put me at risk of leveling up my trousers' waistbands.


Thankful that Steffi and Kelly chose Ghost Dog when we were looking for a doggy, instead of a barky dog. Ghost Dog isn't barky, he's confident without the need to back it up with grand gestures of vocal annoyance.


Thankful for weekend junk TV with Steffi. An opportunity to enjoy the rewards of a few well-earned hours' retreat.


Thankful that after 56 years I've finally started to read nutrition labels on food. I don't always abide by the healthiest decisions, because junk food is just too tasty. But this new awareness has me slanting toward healthier choices.


Thankful that I married well and the kids have a good momma.


Thankful to have parents who have earned the proverbial crowded table. Family talking, laughing, and enjoying each other. Proof of lives well lived.



A peaceful and productive 2024 to you!

-Bill 


Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Writers Drinking Coffee podcast


I was on my first podcast! The Writers Drinking Coffee podcast graciously had me on, a first-time novelist, to discuss my novel, Magglio Cervantes. [Available on Amazon.] The recording took place on September 28 by means of a Zoom call.


The preceding three weeks, to prepare myself and steady the pre-game nerves, I listened to a bunch of their prior podcast episodes. This allowed me to hear the types of questions posed to their guests. During our morning walks, me and Ghost Dog, I practiced answering those questions. That was my motivational outlet, master the nerves. Or at least contain them.


On the evening of the recording, at 15 minutes before the hour, I was staring at the computer screen discussing with myself if I should click the Join the Meeting link. You know, a courtesy of showing up early, thankful for the opportunity to be interviewed. But I didn't want to appear TOO eager, even though I was, so I decided I would click on eight minutes early, instead. A few minutes of panic would shortly follow.


I clicked the Zoom meeting link at eight minutes before the hour. A window popped up advising that a Zoom update was needed and I could not proceed without it! 'Holy Toledo! How long is the download going to take?! And will a computer Restart be needed?!'


There was no choice, so the download was initiated. It thankfully took only two minutes! But then another window appeared. Installation was now required! Again with the 'Holy Toledo! How long is the installation going to take?! And will a computer Restart be needed?!'


By the grace of Tim Apple, I'm a Mac user, a computer Restart was not needed. I managed to join the Zoom a less gracious two minutes early instead of the desired eight.


"There he is," said one of the hosts, of whom there were three.


I explained the high tension with the required Zoom download and installation. Then rambled on about how "I've listened to so many of your podcasts, that I have a little celebrity awe right now, but I'll try to behave." It would seem undeniable. I'm a goof.


We were on video during the 5-minute introductory preamble. It was suggested that I increase the volume input on my headset, a request to which I amicably complied, followed by instructions on how the podcast was going to go. We then turned off video to conserve bandwidth before recording.


Fifteen seconds before the recording started, I was asked, "Are there any questions you'd like me to ask?"


"Please ask me about the cover."


"Good. I already have some questions. I really like it. . . . And record."



Please click this link to listen to my podcast interview: [click here]



I was very nervous at the start of the podcast, this being my first media junket and all. Some semblance of comfort set in by the second question.


After concluding the recording we returned to video for a brief debrief. I felt almost celebratory at the conclusion. A release of performance anxiety. I also really appreciated the host providing constructive feedback regarding the novel. Appreciative not just because it was saved for when we were off-air, but appreciative because constructive feedback is a gift. It should be embraced when coming from someone who cares enough to share it forward. Constructive feedback is not always easy to offer, but it is important to anyone interested in improving at one's craft.


Thank you to the Writers Drinking Coffee podcast for having me on! I very much appreciate the opportunity and your gracious hosting. 



Please click here for a look at Magglio Cervantes, or to purchase, and Thank you! [click here]




Saturday, July 29, 2023

The Book Collector


His life was indecorously anchored in buffoonery. A wreckage, was his existence, like an otherwise vacant lot festooned with rusted out husks of inoperable cars and burned out remains of spent furniture. Yet, despite such vacuous terrain he did well in one single area. He had fantastic literary taste punctuated by an insatiable appetite for reading material.


Dating back to his wasted summers of high school, whatever silliness he'd been deeply immersed in, he always found time to imbibe deeply of literary consumption. He was a reader, in most basic terms. And not just comic books, graphic novels, and the back of cereal boxes. He read books. All kinds, even ones without pictures. This was his redeeming quality, his penchant for reading. Good thing, too, as he led a life vastly in need of redemption.


Summer breaks during high school, that's when it got into the full swing, his budding reading appetite. Like the lazy bones he was, he would sleep in well past 10:00, like clockwork. If it wasn't for the blinding sunlight that assaulted his somnolent carcass through the window he might have slept in until dinner.


His bedroom, were it not for the fortuitously uncovered windows unable to hold back the lovely, motivating machination of the sun's rays, who knows how long the lummox might waste away stewing in the now slumber-laden welcoming warmth of his bed. Without curtains or blinds there was very little in the way of defensive bulwarks to counteract the sun's effulgent offensive. And this was no guy with initiative enough to change the windows' lack of coverings.


Rolling around to a sun-induced restless wakefulness he would have strength enough to stretch, roll onto his side, grab a book from the headboard, then read in bed. This would mark the beginnings of his day. Vacating his bed, however, would take still a stronger calling. Most days it would require a belly rumbling with hunger or a full bladder, this graceless rascal.


With the burgeoning of each new summer, he'd be reminded by the sun that the windows still were not equipped with blinds. Lacking the gumption to cover the windows and the sun's unrelenting cheer, the routine from prior summer would repeat. He could muster little more strength than to roll over and reach for a book. So went the routine carrying forward undisturbed.


It was in such ineffectual surroundings his inchoate love for books was formed. From whence forth it flourished. He would read one book after another, then start on yet another. Sometimes engaging multiple books simultaneously breaking from one book to read from the next, much believing this would allow him to read more by mixing in several tomes. The mixing in of different tastes, he reasoned, to keep the appetite insatiably whet with anticipation.


Variety being not just the spice of life, but also the way by which to maximize one's reading capacity. He equated this to a fella with a plate of steak, only steak, and the speculation that said fellow would be able to consume a greater quantity if he also had a complimentary side dish to refresh his steak-eating inclination. Even if the side was some silly vegetable like brussel sprouts. But not beets, on this culinary peculiarity he remained steadfast.


As the waif grew into a mostly functional adult, a nascent book collection took shape. His bookcase, formerly occupied by his football cards, a baseball mitt and such sophomoric intransigent possessions of male youth. These cluttered markings of adolescence slowly gave way to his books. He kept each after reading, revered like well-earned trophies. The bookcase slowly filled, but fill it did. Then came the small cabinets which too became full with his literary treasures.


As the years robustly rolled by his level of maturation inched forward. His life, not ready to be viewed in its own full light, did continue to excel as it pertained to his books. The collection came to encompass several bookcases, shelves, boxes stacked one atop the other in his room and under his bed, still more in the garage. Then there was the surface area, desks and a table formerly open like so much of the great plains of North America, they gradually and completely filled with books. Several neat piles, then more standing vertically and tightly bookended.


His books were gluttonously numerous. Glorious. He would sometimes pull down an entire bookcase or two of his former triumphs. Slowly leafing through the pages, reviewing his highlights and margin notes. With the constructive solitude of a pro-bowl quarterback studying game film of the competition to enhance his skill, he would sort his books, put them in different piles, only later to rethink and reorganize them again in some other fashion. Whiling away large swaths of his day, he could play with these literary toys with the delight of a baby boy enjoying a bin of plastic dinosaurs.


Then there was his uncle, a gentleman kindly occupying space on the opposite end of the litterateur spectrum. This guy, and he was a nice fellow, glibly shunned the idea of having multiple books in the wings awaiting their turn. He wanted only a single book at a time. Complete one book, then buy another, but by no means was there a need to have bunches of books lugged around like so much dunnage.


The two knew of each other's bibliophilic proclivities. They openly discussed and chuckled at the other's folly, but respected it. Every person was allowed to err, so agreed both, and here each could see how the other enjoyed theirs. 


And so it was. The book collector and anti-book collector greeting each other with sincere delight, even though there would forever be this rift between them.



[Inspired by an animated and joyful conversation with my son and biggest brother, two lovely litterateurs, while vacationing in Pacific Grove the summer of 2022. The summer reading imagery is an outtake from my own questionably productive adolescent years. -wdk]


Saturday, June 3, 2023

Magglio Cervantes, a novel


With much pride and satisfaction I announce my first novel, Magglio Cervantes, is live on Amazon. [amazon.com/author/williamklem]




After the demise of his family he is destined to spend centuries traveling the earth. The cruel circumstances that leave him alone in the world also render him immortal. Struggling with internal turmoil he must find a way to go on . . . because anything is now possible.


Adventuring and death-defying developments unfold. There will be the Black Plague of Medieval Europe, the Spanish Inquisition, a boating mishap, the Dutch East India Company, the American Revolution and Civil War, spelunking, the Salem witch trials, a brush with the Papal Father, a bloody nose, blueberry scones and hot chocolate, a belvedere, an Irish pub, the Great War, and paella. But with so much grief and trauma behind him can Magglio Cervantes find meaning in this life?


Click here to see more: [Magglio Cervantes]



[Published April 2023]


Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Monkeys In the Mast



Indian Ocean off the coast of Madagascar, late 19th century


There were dozens of them. Dozens of monkeys in dozens of cages being cared for by a dozen jackasses. 'Cared for' is deployed generously, because the level of care could barely be considered life sustaining, had the monkeys' journey not started from a baseline of very good health. 'Jackass' is also generously used because these miscreants would have to be viewed through rose-colored goggles to be considered as decently as jackasses.


The monkeys had been captured and caged on Madagascar. Since their discovery by Western civilization in 1859, monkey ownership had been all the rage for personal bragging rights. These monkeys were en route to being sold to private zoos or wealthy Western citizens and their ever insatiable appetite to enrich their lives with pet monkeys. Sad beasts, both. The monkeys for their sordid forthcoming future of captivity, and the rich citizens errantly seeking fulfillment through possessions.


Monkeys in the wild live in hierarchical communities rife with rivalries and cliques. They know their standing within their community. But this was a long way removed from the wild landscapes of their home. As if by a form of simian mental telepathy, they knew, did these monkeys, that their current setting allowed for no such luxury of a hierarchy. If they were to prevail it would be through a shared struggle and camaraderie against a common enemy.


When dealing with jackasses it becomes a waiting game. The monkeys must await an opportunity or a mistake, recognize that opportunity, then know what to do with it. They could see they were no match against the steel cages, but also figured they'd fare adequately enough against the men. They needed only that chance. 


The men spent much of their time drinking hooch, playing cards and fighting. Very little of it with success. Maintaining the cargo occupied only minimal brain power, which was good because that threshold could be met by this lot, though not by a wide margin. The monkeys, though, their interactions were total awareness. All eyes, watching, learning and planning.


The men approached the cages twice daily with bananas and bowls of water. They'd unlock a cage, toss in the bananas, change the water bowl, then watch their captives after closing and locking it. Just sit back and watch as if it were their own personal zoo exhibit. The monkeys, too, doing the same, sitting back with banana in hand watching their captors.


At these feeding times they resisted the self-serving behavior in the wild. One caged monkey would grab the banana bunch, pull one off, then pass the bunch around the horn, each monkey cooperating. They ate their bananas and watched the human detritus who was watching them from just beyond the cage. Really creepy, if you were aware of it, which the jackass was not, so he watched with amusement. The monkeys watching with something more constructive in mind than entertainment.


One night shortly after taking to sea on a glorious cloudless night there was a gentle summer breeze, like so many other nights at this time of year. Millions of stars poked through the black canopy above as if pin pricks in a blanket with a backdrop of illumination.


Then came the opportune jackass as all the monkeys knew would occur. He struggled locking the cage. Too much hooch in his belly played games on his vision and he was certain the keyhole kept moving. He didn't struggle for long because one of the monkeys had aptly recognized the opportunity to strike.


Without hesitation the monkey slammed the gate outward striking the man full in the face. Given his fermented state he went down without a grunt or cry. With its hand still on the gate the monkey stepped forward. One foot outside the cage stood in freedom, the other still in captivity, as if testing the water temperature of a pool before diving in. He turned to look back as his compadres. With only minimal vocalizing they all knew what to do.


The lead monkey grabbed the key and went from cage to cage unlocking his compatriots. He lacked the learned dexterity having no experience with keys and locks, but its skills of observation, in conjunction with an opposable thumb, eventually yielded the desired result. Over and over again.

 

The thing about monkeys is that they are deceptively strong. They appear physically no more imposing than a skinny grade school boy. Looks, though, can be deceiving. A monkey could easily handle any of these men in the event a physical scuffle were to commence, as it soon would. Appearances aside, monkeys are a dangerous foe, especially for someone unsuspecting with no time to prepare a sensible defense. Someone who maybe expects to find dozens of monkeys caged up only to find them loose on the deck and angry would find himself to be disadvantaged.


The card game and drinking below deck were unaware of the budding chaos. A man emerged on deck with a jug in hand. He closed the door behind him, yawned and stretched. Standing at the rail taking a hearty swig to finish the hooch then tossed the empty jug into the sea. He unbuttoned his breaches to release his bladder into the ocean while looking up at the beautiful stars overhead. Only to him, having seen this remarkable vision thousands of time before it meant no more to him than if it really was only light behind a curtain with pinholes. That's when he heard it. A squeak or something.


Turning his head he saw dozens of dark shapes on deck. Like a bunch of skinny little boys all staring in his direction. In his state of hooch it struck him odd that the boys had such long arms. That's when he noticed one of the cages was open. Turning, he realized they were all open and there was a monkey directly in front of him. A squeak vocalized from its throat, the monkey.


A surprised "Oh" emanated from the man.


Then the altercation, ever so brief. A yell as he tumbled over board.


The other men came out at a mad scramble. Only they weren't mad so much as confused. Emerging into this melee steeped in confusion was mere child's play to this organized and determined coterie of monkeys and their viscous rampaging sentiment.


The melee's thrust started near the galley entrance and quickly oozed inside. The monkeys prevailed and their carnage was devastating, disgusting, and complete. Monkeys knew no such thing as a mercy rule. The men's suffering would be slow, those who had not already succumbed.


In their frenzied state after subduing the men they scampered throughout the ship unrestrained. They found the food supplies and ate their fill, then got into the men's sleeping quarters and the hull. Wreckage followed them like the wake of a heavy cruiser. 


The sun rose a few hours later to a ship full of monkeys. With the excitement dying down they got bored and emerged back to the main deck in the heat of high noon. It was hot, but the ocean breeze effectively functioned as a cooling countervail. A few fatally injured men were strewn about. Their lights had not yet been extinguished for some, but would be gone before the sun would set.


The monkeys did what monkeys do. They climbed. This sailing ship was a veritable joyful playground jungle gym for beasts who could master such climbing feats. They took to the masts like natural sailing mammals. The day passed with no further excitement. The second day, though, would require decision making. 


A few nautical miles off the port side was another sailing vessel, this one manned by humans. Eager to exchange news after so many months out to sea they signaled to the monkey ship by means of their nautical flags. The monkeys did not signal back because they knew not the communicating code of human mariners. Plus they didn't know where the signal flags were stowed.


Impatient for news and riled up at the perceived snub, the manned ship changed course. It headed directly toward the monkey ship. They were determined to get their news exchange as is expected courtesy between vessels at sea. The sea breeze was robust causing the interception in a short time. As the distance closed and visibility became clear, the developing scene that took shape was remarkable, for both ships.


From a distance close enough to toss a lime, depending on one's arm strength, the denizens of both ships paused with all eyes looking at the other. The men saw a wooden sailing ship, much like their own, with no sign of humans, but dozens of monkeys hanging from the mast. They also saw cages on deck, open and empty. The monkeys saw a vessel like their own had been only two days before. A ship with men on the loose.


"Monkeys. What do you make of that," asked the captain playfully to his first mate.


"It would appear, sir, that monkeys have mastered sailing craft. Or have escaped from the cages," replied the first mate, half joking.


"Well, no doubt on your commendable observation skills. What do you suspect of the men aboard?"


"I suspect their ending was unpleasant."


"What do you think is on the ship? Or more specifically, what is there for us to commandeer once the monkeys are under control," without really contemplating by what means one might control a monkey.


The manned ship, with little further discourse, decided they would board the monkey ship. The monkeys meanwhile, without discussion or consultation, eagerly awaited another opportunity. After their practice run two days prior this new interaction would go even smoother than did before. All eyes were on the approaching ship. As it got closer they looked around at each other, a visual leveling up of confidence, then instinctively positioned themselves into some vestige of battle formation.


In the sailors' defense, they couldn't possibly have known what they were about to engage. Monkeys on a ship. Two items with seemingly no likely possibility of overlap, yet here it was occurring in real life, monkeys at the helm of an ocean-faring vessel. What to expect was the quandary. Before game planning a proper course of action, the choice to engage the monkey ship had been enacted.


The sailors eased their ship adjacent, then lay a plank across for passage. With very little vocalization, as if issuing instructions by means of eye contact, the monkeys' course of action was settled. They would grapple. Only this time they were a well practiced troop and the rage swelled deeply as they were the first on the plank to communicate across.


The monkeys held advantage and would not relinquish. The men, still not certain what might transpire reacted with deadly hesitation. The monkeys, with no wasted motion swept across the planks with the frightening efficiency of battle-experienced pirates.


A repeat of two days earlier unveiled itself in the beauty of full daylight and a clear field of engagement. There were some monkey losses as a few of the men managed to unsheathe a sword for a swing or two before being overpowered. There were several musket shots, but few humans can move as quickly as a monkey. How could they possibly lead the erratic movements of such a beast with a firearm. Despite being experienced with musketry this firing was not successful. But the concluding wave of monkey aggression was.


The monkeys now dominated two ships. Afloat at sea awaiting what probability or improbability might follow. The masts, both of them, festooned with monkeys staring ahead at the sun setting out over the horizon of a beautiful deep blue. Dolphins ahead in the surf jumping out of the water as if leading a mammalian parade celebrating the victory.



[Inspired by two things. A short story by Mark Helprin, the title of which eludes me. Also by a fantastic painting in a Los Angeles pub where I watched my brother's band perform in January. The painting was a wooden sailing ship enveloped in what appeared to be fruitless defensive battle against a giant octopus. The ocean is wonderful, and so are monkeys. wdk]



Tuesday, March 21, 2023

The Organ Grinder

    • 1908 Oxford, England


      He was an organ grinder, grinding away to brighten the day of pedestrians within earshot. He wasn't playing the organ, but turning the wheel projecting the music. This was not accompanied by a monkey in diminutive sequined vest and fez, just the man and his organ grinder. Appreciative passersby would toss a coin into his box. He was Domenico Tedesco.


      The man made a living for himself. Not elegantly, but effectively. Ten hours of day enduring this same roster of songs. Nine hours if he'd had a good day knocking off an hour early. How many times had he heard each song? So many times, in fact, that the organ music had come to dominate his aural ambiance, even after hours when there was quiet. He heard it.


      Late at night concluding the evening meal dipping bread into his tomato sauce residue. A favorite part of the meal enjoying the bread crusts. The organ, meanwhile, had been put away hours earlier. Yet there it was, clear as if still playing, he heard the organ music. Some evenings the phantom ambience was so clear in his head that he was impelled to look at the organ in the corner of the room, just to make sure it was still put away and box closed. It was. Like it always was. But the organ music played on in his head from incessant repetition. An unwanted continuous serenade tempering his meal's otherwise enthusiastic denouement.


      The next morning he'd be back at it again. Organ grinding to earn one's daily bread. Only this morning, a grand proposal would displace the mendacity for the first time in many months. 



      A gentleman approached. He was nicely dressed in his Sunday best, but not well dressed. A friendly interloper to dispel a small portion of the day's tedium. They'd spoken on several occasions. Never deep, but friendly. Two paisans sharing an opportunity to speak in their own native Italian tongue. The gentleman had circumstances that needed addressing and he'd come to the possibility that the organ grinder could be a factor in seeking resolution. With pleasantries exchanged the opening salvo was delivered.


      "Domenic, we have known each other for a few months now. I have something to ask you," started the gentleman. "You see, I have a daughter, she is unmarried." 


      "Ah, you are a lucky man to have family," replied Domenico seeing where this was heading and not yet knowing how he felt about it.


      "You, too, are unmarried, no," getting to the point. The directness was disorienting and Domenic stopped grinding out the organ music. "You see, I have a parcel of land in Italy, in Cassino. If you marry my daughter the land will be yours." 


      "I know Cassino, to the south of Rome," artfully dodging commitment volleying for extra time to think. This was a lot to digest all at once. He thought how nice it would be to continue brainlessly grinding away with the organ instead of trying to maneuver this tenuous situation.


      The conversation thankfully wound down without any immediate decision making. The one not wanting to press too firmly on the other. The other uncertain as to whether the proposal would be a burden or a blessing. But Domenico did know that a more meaningful existence awaited ahead for him. The two parted on friendly terms to follow up in a day or so.


      That evening, for a pleasant change, he enjoyed his bread dipping without the organ's phantom ambience cluttering his head, now that there was something worthy of thought. His head was clear. And so was his decision. A wife and family will be mine. When they next met it was agreed that he would marry the gentleman's daughter, Rosa.


      With that Domenic and Rosa would soon be married. They both lived in Oxford, separately, while making arrangements and planning their future. He met her family, the gentleman introducing the organ grinder as the man who would marry his daughter. They liked each other, the two affianced, but still to be talking marriage without knowing each other beyond these superficial greetings was a scary prospect. But not as scary as the prospect of loneliness. 


      They married February 1909 and got along well, the bride and groom, as evidenced by a baby boy being born before a year had passed. Lodovico was born December 1909. With children come a new, more serious reality. People to care for, little people who are totally dependent on your day's success.


      The time had come to depart from Oxford to see what awaited them in Cassino, Italy. The land with a home, acreage and olive trees. It was wonderful. He also met Rosa's mother, Teresa, who lived in the home with them. His bride by this time had their second child. Germano was born, another little boy, and her mother was of help with the two children.


      Domenic's burden grew, and he embraced it. A man has to do what he must to support his family, was his belief. Life was hard, but opportunities present themselves. You must be able to recognize these opportunities and be ready to take action, even if they were in the New World.


      The organ grinder went abroad to America leaving his family behind in Cassino. This short-term separation so that they might be together in the long-term. The organ had long-ago gone fallow for a more constructive existence for his family. He would work in the land of opportunity, live there meagerly and send money back to Rosa. The plan was to save up enough money to buy passage for the family.


      It took three years of hard manual labor. Domenic had no trade, but he was strong and could manage any job should brute force be the fuel by which to tame it. He was employed as a ditch digger. Not a well paying job, but so committed was he, that even at this wage he was able to save money. The immense feeling of victory with that final savings installment to Rosa in Cassino. He felt heroic and joyful, having come so far from those lonely days in Oxford to living in America with his family to soon join him. It would now be only months before reuniting.


      Tickets for passage had been purchased for Rosa and the boys. The day had come to board ship. June 1913 on the SS San Giovanni from Cassino. Rosa carried her one year old, plus all the luggage. A big load to handle by herself. Her mother offered to help by bringing the older boy, now three-years old, to the ship to rendezvous with them. 


      Rosa was early and waited, reluctant to board the ship until her mother arrived with the older boy. Where is momma? Where is my boy? The ship's steward occasionally asking, "Are you ready to board, miss? The ship will be departing soon." But her mother never arrived, nor did Lodovico.


      The ship's whistle let out an enormous blast. The finality of her life's divergence from her son struck hard. Tears streaming down both cheeks, Rosa cried out and hugged Germano tightly who started to cry in frightened solidarity with his mother.


      "Miss, I'm sorry. Please, you must board now. The ship will be leaving presently," said the steward with sympathetically upraised eyebrows.


      "My baby boy, my Lodovico," she cried while boarding ship, but board she must. It was later surmised that her mother didn’t bring the older boy because she didn’t want to be left alone in Italy.


      Arriving at Ellis Island brought commotion trying to disembark the ship. The manifest listed Rosa traveling with two children. Yet, here she was arriving in America with only one. There was suspicion that she possibly tossed the other child overboard. That was eventually settled with the outlandish explanation of her son being left back in Italy. Rosa again weeping for her lost son.


      She arrived in Detroit reuniting with her husband. Her joyful reunion with her Domenic stifled by their lost boy. But life goes on. And so must the Tedescos. His work continued as there were forever ditches needed digging. He was a strong man and threw himself into it with renewed vigor. With each shovelful of dirt and gravel, he thought of his lost son. He'd arrive home each evening to his wife and son with physical exhaustion matched equally with rejuvenated spirit, for they were his motivation.


      He continued working and they saved money, but now, providing for three. This was a different dynamic than living for only one and saving everything above the bare minimum. The bare minimum was to be endured by himself alone, but his family deserved better. Then there were more children, and the needs of a growing family.


      Rosa was also constantly at work. All day in the kitchen, cleaning up after one meal, then preparing and cooking the next. Even still, there was more to be done. Instead of striving to fulfill the needs of a family of six, they must find a way to earn more to save up for their lost boy. To help make ends meet Rosa took in boarders. There was room for two. She was industrious and also made beer in the basement of their home on Cardoni Street during the Prohibition years, 1920-1933. Amongst her customers were two kindly police officers, occasionally stopping by to buy a bottle of the latest brew, or tipping her off if a search was forthcoming.


      In July 1927, the family had finally saved enough. The money was given to a godfather who traveled from the U.S. to Italy and returned with Lodovico. He was 17 when he arrived in America aboard the SS Conte Biancamano. He didn't remember his parents or baby brother. He had grown up thinking his grandmother had been his mom. In addition to his little brother, he now also had four American-born siblings, another brother and three sisters.



      [This is the true story of my great maternal grandparents as remembered by their granddaughter, my Mom. Lodovico is my Grandpa Tedesco. -wdk 3/2023]



      • Domenico Tedesco, 12/7/1884 (Cassino, Frosinone, Italy) - 7/29/1956 (Los Angeles, CA).
      • Rosa Lanni, 12/16/1891 (Cassino, Frosinone, Italy) - 2/27/1936 (Detroit, Michigan).
      • They were married 2/14/1909 in Banbury, Oxfordshire, England. It is unknown why they were in England, for how long, or for what purpose.
      • Rosa's father was Felix Lanni, the gentleman who made the proposal.
      • Teresa Nieri, Rosa's mother, was left behind in Cassino after Lodovico [my grandfather] emigrated to America. She passed away one month later, August 1927.
      • Lodovico 'David' Tedesco, 12/22/1909 (Oxford, England) - 4/21/2000 (Burbank, CA).
      • To read about Lodovico, my Grandpa Tedesco, click here [https://wdklem.blogspot.com/2020/06/lodovico.html].