I’ve enjoyed a couple of Allen Rizzi’s stories from his fascinating family history. The Immigrant is his latest one:
The Immigrant
My Thoughts: What a compelling life story of a man who immigrated to the US as a child. A child prodigy on the violin, he returned to Europe to study, leaving his mother and brothers in the US. By then, the Great Depression had begun so jobs were scarce. He adapted time after time having surprising jobs in Hollywood, he served in the Signal Corps during WWII, and one of his hobbies eventually led to an amazing contribution to salmon fishing in Oregon. What a legacy!
The Horse Whisperers from Anaconda
My thoughts: This is a corner of history that was new to me–a family moving from Missouri to the wilds of Montana to oversee a timber operation, but the sons learning training horses from Blackfoot Indians, which turned into jobs. They also trained horses for the army during WWI. They were hunters and mountainmen. Leather items they made still survive among descendants.
Lee and Edd Allen’s interests were so different. Lee stayed with their parents when they moved to California, still cherishing the outdoors. Edd was an artist, illustrator, printmaker, and lived in Paris for a time. One etching is in the Smithsonian, and others have become popular to collect–under his birth name of James E. Allen. A great tribute to the author’s ancestors and relatives.
The Author
Here is Allen’s Amazon Author Page. Please also have a look at his website.
