Fire in My Bones
A Novel of Sacco and Vanzetti
by
Book Details
About the Book
Fire in My Bones is a fictional account of facts based on the Sacco and Vanzetti case, two Italian immigrants accused---many to this day believe wrongfully---of a crime they did not commit. Sacco, a shoemaker, and Vanzetti, a fish peddler, were self-proclaimed anarchists. More specifically, they were workers’ – rights advocates during the time of the Great War and soon after when the Red Scare was sweeping the country and Attorney General Mitchell Palmer was making raids on and deporting suspected radical immigrants. The novel builds on details of unfortunate coincidences. The bad timing of their arrest (blatantly wrongful to begin with?) that suddenly thrusts them in the public eye, leads to their subsequent trials, convictions and executions at midnight August 22, 1927 among a maelstrom of raging protests and riots throughout the world.
About the Author
Pat Angelo was born in Johnstown, PA at the time when Bethlehem Steel was the industrial centerpiece of the city. He grew up in a steelworkers’ family and worked in the steel mill before entering the service. After being discharged from the service, Angelo graduated from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and engaged in a teaching career. He retired an Assistant Professor Emeritus of English from Edinboro University of PA after 31 years of teaching. Angelo resides in Edinboro, PA with his wife Joan who is also a writer of books including the Monongahela Chronicles, a Five Volme narrative about the labor unions and the working middle class culture of Allegheny County, Pittsburgh, Pa.