A Bold and Dangerous Family: The Remarkable Story of an Italian Mother, Her Two Sons, and Their Fight Against Fascism
Written by Caroline Moorehead
Narrated by John Lee
4/5
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About this audiobook
The acclaimed author of A Train in Winter and Village of Secrets delivers the next chapter in ""The Resistance Quartet"": the astonishing story of the aristocratic Italian family who stood up to Mussolini's fascism, and whose efforts helped define the path of Italy in the years between the World Wars—a profile in courage that remains relevant today.
Members of the cosmopolitan, cultural aristocracy of Florence at the beginning of the twentieth century, the Rosselli family, led by their fierce matriarch, Amelia, were vocal anti-fascists. As populist, right-wing nationalism swept across Europe after World War I, and Italy’s Prime Minister, Benito Mussolini, began consolidating his power, Amelia’s sons Carlo and Nello led the opposition, taking a public stand against Il Duce that few others in their elite class dared risk. When Mussolini established a terrifying and brutal police state controlled by his Blackshirts—the squaddristi—the Rossellis and their anti-fascist circle were transformed into active resisters.
In retaliation, many of the anti-fascists were arrested and imprisoned; others left the country to escape a similar fate. Tragically, Carlo and Nello were eventually assassinated by Mussolini’s secret service. After Italy entered World War II in June 1940, Amelia, thanks to visas arranged by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt herself, fled to New York City with the remaining members of her family.
Renowned historian Caroline Moorehead paints an indelible picture of Italy in the first half of the twentieth century, offering an intimate account of the rise of Il Duce and his squaddristi; life in Mussolini’s penal colonies; the shocking ambivalence and complicity of many prominent Italian families seduced by Mussolini’s promises; and the bold, fractured resistance movement whose associates sacrificed their lives to fight fascism. In A Bold and Dangerous Family, Moorehead once again pays tribute to heroes who fought to uphold our humanity during one of history’s darkest chapters.
Caroline Moorehead
Caroline Moorehead is the New York Times bestselling author of the Resistance Quartet, which includes A Bold and Dangerous Family, Village of Secrets, and A Train in Winter, as well as Human Cargo, a National Book Critics Circle Award finalist. An acclaimed biographer, she has written for the New York Review of Books, The Guardian, and The Independent. She lives in London and Italy.
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Reviews for A Bold and Dangerous Family
9 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Rossellis were an Italian Jewish family who opposed Mussolini and his fascists from the beginning of his rise to power in the early 1920’s. Amelia, and her two sons Carlo and Nello, were active in the socially liberal circles that were trying to advance both the political and social development of Italy at the beginning of the 20th century, at which time Italy had been a unified country for barely 30 years. However, like most of the groups who eventually opposed fascism, their vacillation between Marxism, socialism and liberalism made them very ineffective as a unified political force. In the years following the first world war, the fascists’ mix of populist nationalism and physical intimidation of their political opponents gave them the upper hand and eventually secured for Mussolini all the reins of power; from his position as dictator, he set about ruthlessly identifying and neutralizing all opposition. As much as it is a biography of the Rosselli family, the book is also a history of the development of the fascist movement and how it took over Italy. Some of the best chapters in the book are those that describe the history of those times.After the fascist takeover in 1921, the two Rosselli brothers were soon identified as opponents of the regime; they were both imprisoned for short periods and both suffered long sentences of internment on one of the small islands off the southern Italian coast. During a period of freedom, Carlo arranged to have the leader of the Italian socialist party, who was under house arrest, smuggled out of the country; for this he was again imprisoned and then interned on the island of Lipari. With the help of friends and associates abroad, Carlo and two of his fellow internees escaped from Lipari by motor boat to Tunisia, and eventually made their way to France. Apart from 6 months in Spain fighting on the republican side in that country’s civil war, Carlo lived the rest of his life in France, where he became the effective leader of the many anti-fascist Italian exiles there, and organized a number of actions against the fascist regime. Although his escape from internment and the activities he later initiated - like scattering anti-fascist leaflets from a plane over the city of Milan - had propaganda value only, they were sufficient to make Mussolini regard him as the principal opponent of the regime. Carlo became a prime target of the fascist regime’s intelligence operations and ultimately for assassination by agents of the regime. The younger Rosselli brother Nello, an academic and historian, secured his release from internment thanks to the intervention of academics, who undertook to act as guarantors of his future good behavior. Although both his subsequent published work and his private letters show that he never abandoned his opposition to fascism, he did in fact refrain from any further overt activities against the regime, and lived peacefully for several years in Florence with his wife, children and mother. The two brothers and their mother were in constant contact with each other, and occasionally met up in France.All of the efforts of the Rossellis and their fellow anti-fascists were ultimately futile, and failed to disrupt Mussolini’s hold on Italy. The opposition to fascism was amateurish and very fragmented, with constant in-fighting between the communists, socialists, anarchists and liberal republicans; which left them wide open to penetration by spies and agents provocateurs of the fascist regime. Carlo’s escape from internment and all of his activities in France were financed by family money. The exiles received no material or political support from England or France, whose leaders were dealing with their own countries’ political and social problems, and were anxious not to offend Mussolini.Strangely, the fact that the Rosellis were Jewish appears to be almost irrelevant to their lives and activities. They were clearly not in any way observant Jews and they were certainly not Zionists; their homeland was Italy, not Israel or Palestine. If there was any connection between their being Jewish and their opposition to fascism and the fascist regime, then the author completely fails to show this. Nor were they persecuted by the fascist regime because they were Jews. Until 1938, when Mussolini’s alliance with Hitler forced him to apply the Nuremburg laws in Italy, anti-Semitism had not been a part of the fascist program; Mussolini had even publicly ridiculed Hitler’s racial theories as “anti-scientific drivel”. Many Italian Jews were early supporters of the fascists, and Mussolini in fact had a Jewish mistress who was a cousin of the Rossellis. Unfortunately, the book is too long-winded and loaded with information, no doubt intended to enrich the story, but which is in fact superfluous and tedious. Not just the principal characters, but even the many minor ones are all given a full-profile treatment: “thin and very dark, with black eyes and a thick black moustache which curled at the tips.” Or “..a small, fair-haired woman with sapphire eyes who looked frail and diaphanous but was in fact both capricious and obstinate.” By contrast, I have just finished reading the third volume of Robert Caro’s four-volume biography of Linden Johnson. Each of the volumes is about 1,000 pages, and not a page too long. Caro – like author of the Rosselli book –obtained most of his information from letters and papers about his subject; but you do not realize it. Instead of regurgitating lists of adjectives which other people have used to describe the subject, Caro integrates it all into an insightful analysis of the character of his subject and how that explains or contrasts with the details of the life story he is narrating. In this book, although some of the accounts of their exploits are quite vivid, the Rossellis never quite came to life for me as real people. I am sure that they were heroic and self-sacrificing, but their biographer somehow failed to make me feel that.