Something went wrong
Please try again
The Right Thing to Do
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
01 October 1999

A young Italian American woman struggles to find her way between two cultures in this novel of “familial dignity . . . credibility and intelligence” (Kirkus Reviews).
On a stroll in his Queens neighborhood, Sicilian-born Nino Giardello glimpses his daughter, ambitious nineteen-year-old Gina, heading for the subway. Silently, he follows her to Manhattan and watches, outraged, as she walks into the arms of a golden-haired stranger. The incident confirms Nino’s worst suspicions about his daughter, whose American lifestyle he sees as an insult to his heritage.
In a struggle that exceeds all boundaries, including death, father and daughter will engage in a conflict of generations, cultures, and sexes. Josephine Gattuso Hendin captures New York Italian immigrant life with startling precision, exploring the intricate web of a community’s everyday transactions and the multifaceted father-daughter relationship at the heart of the Italian American family.
A coming-of-age novel that is both wryly funny and achingly sad, “The Right Thing to Do effectively portrays both New York’s Italian immigrant milieu and one man’s rage at his own powerlessness in the face of his child’s hunger for life” (Booklist).
FICTION / Literary, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, HISTORY / Social History, FICTION / Cultural Heritage
"Father Nino is an interesting characteroverbearing but not coarse, not the undershirted whassamattayou of the stereotype. . . . Hendin has invested her novel with familial dignity . . . credibility and intelligence." Kirkus
"Hendin's novelistic skill emerges in her portrait of the tyrannical father Ninoone of the memorable characters of recent fiction." Alix Kates Shulman, author of Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen