Thank You Uncle Sam : Calabrian Families in America, Paperback by Allsop, Niall, ISBN 1492752762, ISBN-13 9781492752769, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US

Since 2008, Niall Allsop and his wife Kay have lived in a small Calabrian hilltop town, Santa Severina.

In the town’s square one summer he bumped into a man from New Jersey who was enjoying a vacation back in the town of his birth. Gino Sculco told him how his father had emigrated in 1920, returned to Calabria and emigrated again in 1960, the second time accompanied by one of his sons. In 1967 Gino and his wife Sina followed in their footsteps.

Niall Allsop was so intrigued by the Sculco family’s story that he decided to travel to America to find out more about what motivated them and other Calabrian families who emigrated and to what extent their American Dream had become a reality.

Niall visited families in New Mexico, New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Wisconsin and met and heard about people whose resolve and enterprise was as breathtaking as their stories were touching and unique.

From the man who always thanked Uncle Sam when his monthly pension check arrived to the woman who emigrated alone, and from the man with three families to the man who emigrated three times,Thank you Uncle Sam is packed with real-life characters to make you laugh, cry and wonder at their capacity for survival.

Some families went to America early in the twentieth century; others as recently as the 1960s. Some stories are intriguing and complex; others straightforward and predictable.

Some of the people Niall met were in their, sixties, seventies or eighties; others mere youngsters in comparison. Sometimes he spent just a few hours with them; sometimes he stayed overnight or longer.

Sometimes he knew quite a lot about the family before he met them; usually almost nothing. Some he had already met; most were total strangers.

The stories and experiences of all are both unique and commonplace—they are no more than people’s subjective memories, stories and occasional skeletons, shared with a stranger.

Niall Allsop travelled to America early in November 2012—just after Hurricane Sandy devasted parts of New York and New Jersey and just before the Presidential election; he also spent Thanksgiving with a Calabrian-American family in Wisconsin. Not surprisingly therefore Thank you Uncle Sam is also a travelogue, the story of other people, places and cars that he encountered along the way.