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Book: American Gypsey: A Memoir

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  • Book: American Gypsey: A Memoir

    Kirkus Reviews
    June 15, 2012, Friday

    AMERICAN GYPSY: A Memoir


    In this engaging immigrant memoir, first-time author Marafioti, née
    Kopylenko, describes with humor and introspection how the
    self-described "Split Nationality Disorder" she experienced growing up
    only magnified upon her family's emigration from the former Soviet
    Union to Los Angeles when she was 15. Born into a Moscow-based Roma
    family, the author spent the first 15 years of her life seeing
    Siberia, Mongolia and the former Soviet Union with her parents, who
    performed in a traveling Roma ensemble "the size of a circus." Even as
    a child, Marafioti became acutely aware of racism both within her own
    family, as she witnessed the difficulty her Armenian mother faced
    gaining acceptance from her Russian paternal grandmother, and in
    school, as her Roma heritage was cruelly outed by a classmate sticking
    a sign to her back that read "Gyp." Though well-off in their native
    Moscow, Marafioti's family-especially her father, a gifted guitarist
    and composer-looked to the United States as a land of even greater
    opportunity, where their Romani roots would not carry the Gypsy
    stigma.

    One of the more humorous scenes involves the family's green card
    interview, where the U.S. consular officer's limited Russian led her
    to question Marafioti's mother on her drinking (which she was
    notorious for), when she meant singing (one letter difference in
    Russian), her father babbling on about wishing to play with B.B. King
    and heal people with his bare hands. Soon after the family arrived in
    California, the author's parents divorced, leaving her to cope with a
    broken home and dramatic change in finances, alongside the more
    typical immigrant difficulties of adapting to a foreign language and
    culture. As she recounts her love, loss and academic achievement
    experienced while "attending the same school that Cher once did,"
    Marafioti's probing observation of the contrast of American
    individualism with fierce Roma ethnocentrism, even xenophobia, yields
    a provocative exploration of identity. Contrasting cultural values
    shine in this winning contemporary immigrant account of assimilation
    versus individuation

    Publication Date: 2012-07-10
    Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
    Stage: Adult
    ISBN: 978-0-374-10407-8
    Price: $16.00
    Author: Marafioti, Oksana

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