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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 02/2023
  • 978-1-7923-2008-8
  • 327 pages
  • $18
Vince Sgambati
Author
Sanctuaries
Sanctuaries speaks to the importance of truth for personal and societal healing. Gianni, a gay adoptee, comes of age in a time when adoption and same-sex love are not easily discussed. An unlikely but deep and seemingly fated friendship develops between Gianni and Raffaella, a middle-aged Jewish-Italian Holocaust survivor who took part in the Italian resistance against Fascism. He and Raffaella find solace in the vintage films shown at The Orchard, a revival movie theater in New York’s Lower East Side. Gianni also befriends Gabriel, an African-American drag queen and surrogate parent to homeless queer youth. Recognizing sorrow is what draws Gianni to Raffaella and Gabriel, and them to him. Sanctuaries is the tender story of caring and personal healing, set against the larger turmoil of the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Movement, Stonewall, and the lingering ashes of the Holocaust.
Plot/Idea: 9 out of 10
Originality: 9 out of 10
Prose: 9 out of 10
Character/Execution: 9 out of 10
Overall: 9.00 out of 10

Assessment:

Plot/Idea: This stunning novel, set in the 1950s through the early '70s, originates primarily in New York City, although the story takes a brief foray into Vermont. Themes of racism, sexuality, and self-discovery are richly developed through the narrative's multilayered characters and their intense experiences.

Prose: Dramatic, evocative prose transports readers directly to 1960s New York City: the Village, gay bars, and even parochial schools are forcefully depicted, interspersed with colorful food and clothing descriptions. Communes in Vermont make an appearance as well, dynamic and immersive in their portrayal. 

Originality: New York City in the '60s is a common setting, but the strength of the characters makes this novel come alive. The story seamlessly melds the Vietnam War, racism, and growing up gay—as well as fragments of the second World War—into a powerful journey of self-discovery and social justice.

Character/Execution: The characters are multilayered and powerful, with distinctive emotions and experiences that yield meaningful narrative arcs. Especially memorable are central protagonist Gianni; Italian Jewish Holocaust survivor Raffaella; and Black drag queen Gabriel, whose immeasurable kindness gives Gianni a safe place to come into his own.

Date Submitted: May 25, 2023

Reviews
Rich with skillfully crafted characters and tender moments, this expansive novel from Sgambati (Most Precious Blood) explores often-taboo subjects of post-World War II New York. Gianni, who discovers he’s adopted during a family quarrel, struggles with self-doubt and uncertainty, questioning his roots and his place in the world. When he realizes he’s in love with Owen, his college sidekick who’s dating his close friend Maura, Gianni slips into depression and quits school, returning home to help his father run the family bakery. An opportunity to launch a pastries counter at the local revival theatre—run by Jewish émigré Hanns—lands him the chance for new friendships—and opens up new pathways to healing.

Sgambati’s prose is fluid and evocative, capturing the nuances of characters, emotions, and events that will linger in readers’ minds long after the novel’s conclusion. Gianni’s connection with Raffaella, a middle-aged Holocaust survivor, and Gabriel, an African American drag queen who takes homeless youth under their wing, is the catalyst for his healing, and Sgambati’s mirroring of Gianni’s transformation through pivotal background events, including the Vietnam War and Civil Rights Movement, adds thematic depth to the narrative. Particularly moving is the connection between Gunter, Gabriel’s close German friend who was imprisoned in Buchenwald for being gay, and Raffaella, who’s certain Gunter helped her when she arrived at the concentration camp.

Sgambati’s sharp, well etched cast steals the show in this touching story, and Gianni’s reshaping is both heartrending and inspiring, as he initially finds an escape in his work at the theatre (aptly naming his business “Sanctuary”), but later acknowledges his need to move on—in Raffaella’s words, “at some point, a sanctuary becomes a prison.” The rewarding relationships Gianni gains, and loses, form the cornerstone for Sgambati’s message that “new and unexpected beginning[s]” are often the most powerful.

Takeaway: A tender coming-of-age about a gay adoptee in post-World War II New York.

Great for fans of: Margot Livesey’s The Boy in the Field, W.G. Sebald’s Austerlitz.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: NA
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 02/2023
  • 978-1-7923-2008-8
  • 327 pages
  • $18
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