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My
mother Giuditta (Judy) Chiarle and my father Giuseppe (Joe) Calvetti,
were born in Balangero, near Turin, Italy. The life their families left behind
is portrayed in a neglected film classic
I
Campagni (English title, The Organizer, 1962), whose interior factory scenes were filmed in
the actual textile mill where my grandparents worked.
Emigrating
(first the men, followed by wives and children) from
1901 to 1910, the Chiarle
and Calvetti families made their way separately across the US, working in mines
in Butte, Montana and Bingham, Utah, then moving on to work in orchards and
canneries in California’s Santa Clara Valley. My parents met as adults in
San
Francisco and married in 1925. They settled in the Mission District, then an
industrial/residential area of European immigrants, with a sprinkling of the
Latinos who later became the majority. I
was born there in 1930, the second of
their two daughters.
My
mother had been the first and only one in her family or my father’s family, or
anyone they knew, to complete high school.
I became the first college graduate
(BA in music, Teaching Credential: SF State College), marrying my high school boyfriend midway through. When I began teaching high school in 1953,
I already had
a son and a daughter.
In
the early 1960s, my first marriage ended, I completed an MA in English/Creative
Writing, and I began teaching in a community college near Berkeley.
By
1968 I had published reviews and stories in small press publications, had
married Robert Bryant, and had found an
agent willing to represent my first
novel. It was published in
1972. In 1976, I left teaching in order to write
full time.
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Website: Lorri Ungaretti |
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