- Amazon Best Seller in "New Releases in Ethnic & National Biographies"
- Amazon Best Seller in "New Releases in Memoirs"
- "poignant and fascinating"-The Schenectady Gazette
- "polished and gently humored ... a graceful blending of personal insights with historical content . . . The author's voice as a professional historian is memorable and accessible."-BookLife Prize
- "rollicking ... sardonic charm ... imaginative prose .... self-deprecating humor ... Pietrusza's story-telling skills carry the day. Anyone who has ever thought longingly about days gone by in picture-perfect small towns will devour these enjoyable reminiscences."-BookLife (Editor's Pick)
- "This book is just so much fun. Don't even think about it or ask why."-Dean Karayanis, Host, "The History Author Show"
A sardonic expedition into a small-town ethnic childhood and post-World War II America-and how to survive Rust Belt hard times. At last . . . a memoir finally worthy of comparison to the uproariously funny fiction of the great Jean Shepherd, author and narrator of the beloved
A Christmas Story.
Only . . . it's all true. Sometimes . . . sadly true.
Award-winning presidential historian and baseball scholar David Pietrusza's witty and wise tale of growing up in the 1950s and 60s,
Too Long Ago is no
Leave It to Beaver or
Father Knows Best episode. It's a unique glimpse into an unjustly ignored and forgotten immigrant experience-Eastern European and devoutly pre-Vatican II Catholic. A tale of a tight-knit Polish community, transplanted from tiny, impoverished Hapsburg-ruled villages to a hardscrabble, hardworking, hard-drinking Upstate New York mill town. It's how the first rust corroded the Rust Belt, sidetracking dreams but not hope.
It's a lively saga of secrets and hard times, of insanity, of manslaughter and murder, of war and postwar, Depression and Recession, racetracks and religions, books and bar rooms, unforgettable personalities and vastly unpronounceable names, of characters and character, of homelessness, of immigration-first to America and then from Rust Belt to Sun Belt-of vices and virtues, and how a sickly, bookwormish boy who loved history and the presidents finally discovered a national pastime and made it his own.
Meet
Too Long Ago's mesmerizing cast of characters: Depression-ravaged Felix and Agnes Marek, Corporal Danny Pietrusza and his wartime adventures, Uncle Tony Lenczewski and his raided saloon, brutal serial-killer Lemuel Smith, the high-kicking weather-prophet "Cousin George" Casabonne, carpet heiress and OSS operative Gertie Sanford, caught behind-enemy-lines Mary Zaklukiewicz, and the homeless (but not hopeless) Uncle Leo Zack.
Alternately sharp-edged and warm-hearted-sometimes shocking and always surprising-
Too Long Ago is a poignant tour-de-force, a no-stopping-for-breath, coming-of-age narrative, akin to cross-breeding Jean Shepherd's boisterous
A Christmas Story with Pulitzer Prize-winner Richard Russo's gritty semi-autobiographical novel
Mohawk (set mere miles from
Too Long Ago) and presenting the genre-bending result in the mesmerizing form of a decidedly non-WASPY rendition of an epic Spalding Gray monolog.