The Cameo

by Cecil Humphery-Smith


Formats

Softcover
£15.95
Softcover
£15.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 08/08/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 442
ISBN : 9781452062679

About the Book

This is a social history written around the experiences of the author during the time he was working in Italy in the 1950's and 60's , since when he has seen considerable changes. The bustling seaport of the ancient city of Naples was a recovering from the Second Great War (WW2) devastation.

You were told "See Naples and die!" - because of the many plagues of cholera, syphilis and other diseases that had caused so much suffering since earliest times. The post-war drug trafficking had begun in earnest. Some of these criminals had the reputation of helping the poor, but all were involved in smuggling, prostitution and misappropriation of funds and medical supplies from relief agencies. Murders were a daily happening perpetrated by the gangs at warfare with each other, and each anxious to exploit the spoils of War and Peace.

High rise flats and offices replace the bombed sites of the days when this story unfolds. Local officials, often blackmailed and corrupt, took every advantage of international aid. To combat communism the US employed the particular brand of Mafia and smugglers, commonly known as the Camorra. .

Churches lit by home-made candles fashioned with prayer were always open; on Sundays and Feast days congregations overflowed, the men escaping from the rear pews to smoke their cigarettes on the portico while the sermon admonished their women folk or bore their children. Nowadays churches are mostly closed for lack of that religious Faith for which Neapolitans were renowned in ardor and song. Candles are factory made


About the Author

Born under the South Downs in a sleepy Sussex village, Cecil came from a family with roots in that English county and having close links with the City of London of which he is a Freeman and liveried of both the Broderers and the Scriveners companies. He trained as a chemist and worked for some years studying antibiotics but continued his interest in heraldry and history. He had also retained his interest in biochemistry and from time to time undertook quality control work among the tomato fields and processing factories of the Po region of Northern Italy and the Naples area. He found that the quickest way of learning the local dialects that helped him to converse with farmers and to get to know about the personalities of the peasants who worked in the fields was to live with them. Sometimes, that meant sleeping in the corner of a one-roomed cottage and eating from tin plates on the patio. The food was always fresh, and in Naples the fish came off the boats of the morning. He found the local clergy particularly helpful in his quest to know more about those with whom he worked. He retired at the age of 81 after serving for 50 years as Principal of an academic institution concerned with the histories of families. The author can soon be identified in the context of this true story, that is told in the style of a fictional novel