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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Historical / General
  • Language:English
  • Series title:The Story of Our Stories
  • Series Number:3
  • Pages:208
  • eBook ISBN:9781543974379
  • Paperback ISBN:9781543974362

Begetters of Children

by Michael Pedretti

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Overview

"Begetters of Children is a stunning epic brought to life with history, photos, and stories of a family framed through the lens and commentary of the epic hero...you feel fully immersed.” Liz Konkel

"The characters have been written so well with such depth that I felt like I was reading a family memoir. You’ll probably end up reading this great book from cover to cover in one sitting as I did." –Kathryn Bennett

"Pedretti has done enormous amounts of research to give atmosphere, depth, and accuracy to the tale." K. C. Finn

Michael Pedretti's Begetters of Children weaves a tale from Northern Italy to Bad Ax (later called Genoa), Wisconsin in this epic family saga! The story is an historical fiction account of how the family settled on San Bernardo Mountain, developed a village, farmed unfarmable land, avoided plagues, wars, thieves and other human disasters, had many children, immigrated to Genoa, Wisconsin, developed the land and populated half of America. (I joke only a little here). The appendix includes the genealogical  history of Stefano Pedretti the first of the family to immigrate to the USA and photographs of vital records found in San Bernardo. The book also includes the history of the village of San Bernardo laced with an account of life on the mountainside including the story of how the citizens of the area developed a republic government in Val San Giacomo several centuries before the American colonies established the American republic.



 



Description

Description of Begetters of Children -- Begetters of Children reveals the life of a gentle, kind and peace-loving family from the time they settled on a barren mountainside in order to avoid war, pestilence and thieves around 840 CE until 100 years after they immigrated to the USA. The book is an historical fiction account of how the family developed a village, farmed unfarmable land, avoided plagues, wars, thieves and other human disasters, had many children, immigrated to Genoa, Wisconsin, where they developed the new land and populated half of America. (I joke only a little here). The effort to eke out a self-sustaining existence high up on a mountainside in Northern Italy was always challenging. Very little land could be cultivated, and they faced short summers and long winters; life came down to preparing for winter and surviving winter. To survive they had to maximize the fertility of the land and of themselves. Still, they all agreed that life, though isolated high up on what they eventually called San Bernardo, was better than living in the valley where they would be subject to the destruction of war, plagues and common thieves. Begetters of Children follows the family from generation to generation, with several side stories that demonstrate basic survival in the tough times as well as advances made in more prosperous times. For example, the reader will discover how and why the tiny population living on that remote mountainside was the first to build a church/community center in their region. The reader will also learn how the family helped to form and maintain a republic in order to preserve their independence - even as the region they lived in changed hands between the Bishop of Como, Italy and the Grison Canton in Switzerland. Most importantly, the reader will discover a family who valued kindness, generosity and peace above all. For nearly 800 years the population of San Bernardo remained stable; the begetters of children proved fertile enough to compensate for the low life-expectancy of the time. Then in the early nineteenth century, advances in food supply, public education and a better understanding of health led to a quick increase in population. Faced with insufficient land for the increase in population and renewed efforts by the Austrians to conscript their young men, plus a desire for a more bearable life, many immigrated to the USA. When some of their former neighbors sent letters about how rich the soil was in Bad Ax, Wisconsin, three brothers of our family gathered what little they owned and headed to Le Havre, where they caught a ship to New York and crossed to the east bank of the Mississippi River which was the western-most frontier at the time. The appendix includes reflections on the role of epic literature in shaping human perspective, the genealogical story of Stefano Pedretti, and facsimiles of vital records found in San Bernardo. The appendix also includes the history of the village of San Bernardo, laced with a vivid account of life on the mountainside. Begetters of Children is volume III of a twelve-part series titled The Story of Our Stories that tells the story of Marianna and Petronella, Peter, Adelaide and Stefano,  Giovanni and Maria Madeline, Agnes and her children, and many more; but first and foremost it is our story, the story of you and me. The Story of Our Stories is an epic composed of 12 books, each with supportive addenda. Each book covers a different story. Some cover the life of a typical family member of a specific generation; others reflect many people of a generation. Another one traces the entire story from beginning to now, and one views future generations based on a legacy fostered by the behavior of our mothers. Each volume tells a critical part of the story, is an integral part of the whole and plays into the unfolding of the entire epic. Each book can be read independently of the rest.

About the author

Michael Pedretti is currently over halfway through writing a twelve volume epic called The Story of Our Stories which tells the journey of an archetypical American family starting from the Mitochondrial Eve right through the next generation with a focus on the last families to live in Europe and the first families to settle in small town America in the second half of the nineteenth century. Begetters of Children is volume III of that series. Pedretti has directed over 100 theater productions and presented/produced over 170 shows from 30 countries. He founded Movement Theatre International in 1979 and served as its Artistic Director for over 20 years. He recently completed a two-volume book covering the work of the originating performance artists whose work was presented at the festivals he produced and who challenged the theater world in the later part of the twentieth century. He has also written a book of poems titled the dog and i: twenty-seven poems.

Book Reviews

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Diego
“The more that you read, the more things you will know” These stories will open up your mind. If you want to know more about our lives just purchase this book, the III of a twelve-part series titled “The Story of Our Stories”. Is incredible thinking about what our ancestor did, to get to us. Just amazing. Read more
Nicole
An Alternative Epic - of Woman and Peace Michael Pedretti has combined historical fiction, regional/national history, and family history to craft a volume of an epic that turns the genre on its head. Instead of "man and arms (conflict, war)" he writes of women, of mothers, daughters, wives and sisters, of gathering and planting instead of reaping, raping, colonizing and pillaging. He writes of building families, of growing gardens and raising animals, of birthing children and seeing many of them die. He writes of a community which, hidden away in a "secret valley" high in the mountains, managed to escape many of the dangers of the era: traveling bandits and thieves, pestilence and plague, conscription into armies whose leaders cared nothing for them except as infantry. This group of families in the mountains of what is now Italy eked out a subsistence life, in harmony, if sometimes also a brutal struggle, with the land itself. And yet at some point, a corner was turned, and enough prosperity came to them to be able to build a church, whose records survive to this day, and form the fact basis for much of the imagined story. The exploration of the themes of life, creativity, growing things and having children are a welcome change to the stories of war, power, winning and losing, destruction and loss that so often fill the shelves of history. A wonderful book in a series that is well worth the time to explore. Read more