PART I: SCENES AND STORIES FROM WESTERN EUROPE, 1951-1954

ITALY, 1953

Daddy and I are faces in the crowd about to enter St. Peter’s Basilica to attend Easter service at the Vatican in Rome.

I’ve blown this particular image up here, because I believe it’s the sharpest and best photograph of all those that Mama made during our three postwar years in Europe. And remember, amid that bustling crowd, she was hand-holding an old Argus film camera without auto-exposure or auto-focus. It’s pretty remarkable, actually.

Decades later, Bernie and I went to Italy together twice, in 1973 and 1990. Click those links to see our photos from those trips.

Everybody recognizes the famous Leaning Tower of Pisa, but few have a photo like this to remind them of a childhood visit on a very uncrowded day. Mama did a great job of using me as a “straight edge” to point out the medieval tower’s notable slope.

Clearly, I wasn’t happy about staring into the sun, which Mama always made me do. But at least I stood still long enough not to mess up her photo, as happened in a few other places where she attempted similar images. I’m very glad now that I behaved in that moment, because I really do love this photo!

As a little girl, this was my first visit to Pompeii, but I told my parents, in total seriousness, that I had been there before. It all was familiar. I had walked those same streets long before, I told them.

That visit launched a fascination with Ancient Rome that ultimately led to my three first-century Roman novels and remains unchanged to this day.

That’s me about to wade in the Mediterranean Sea. Mama feared polio and there was no vaccine yet, so she normally didn’t let me into water that wasn’t chlorinated. This was a special treat, after I endlessly begged to go wading.

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