
Ann Cornelisen (1926–2003)
Author of Women of Shadows: A Study of the Wives and Mothers of Southern Italy
About the Author
Works by Ann Cornelisen
Torregreca: Life, Death, and Miracles in a Southern Italian Village (Italia Series) (1969) 58 copies
Torregreck 1 copy
Associated Works
Writing Women's Lives: An Anthology of Autobiographical Narratives by Twentieth-Century American Women Writers (1994) — Contributor — 128 copies, 3 reviews
Reader's Digest: Black Camels of Qashran / The Wine and the Music / Marnie / Torregreca (1970) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1926-11-12
- Date of death
- 2003-11-12
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Vassar College
- Occupations
- writer
- Awards and honors
- American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award (Literature, 1974)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Cleveland, Ohio, USA
- Places of residence
- Abruzzo, Italy
Rome, Georgia, USA - Place of death
- Rome, Georgia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Any Four Women Could Rob the Bank of Italy by Cornelisen Ann (1-Mar-1985) Paperback by Ann Cornelisen
In a summer of robberies and kidnappings in Italy in the 1970s, El (Eleanor) and Lacey keep getting waved through police checkpoints because the carabinieri are on the lookout for male suspects. The two friends sarcastically remark to each other that "any four women could rob the Bank of Italy" because Italian men are so sexist, they would never believe women could plan and carry out such a crime. In the spirit of feminism and equality, they decide to gather up a few friends and rob the mail show more train at the station of San Felice.
Wonderfully fresh and funny, this book rushes along at a terrific pace. The writing is so smart & sassy, it was a joy to read. show less
Wonderfully fresh and funny, this book rushes along at a terrific pace. The writing is so smart & sassy, it was a joy to read. show less
Everyone knows men can rob the banks of anywhere. It's a no-brainer that men have the smarts and brawn to pull it off. But, what about four women? What about the Bank of Italy? This is the story of what happens when four, plus two, bored, ex-patriot women get thinking about a sexist comment. Really, there are six women involved: Hermione, Martha, Eleanor Kendall, Lacey, Caroline Maffei, and Kate Pound. Of course, they succeed in robbing the Bank of Italy, but now there is another problem. show more What good is successfully robbing a bank when the crime is blamed on men? How do they get credit for it as women without giving themselves away? show less
very interesting descriptions of the life of poor women in general----and specifically sicilian women. an idea she poses is that disadvantaged women, the world over, are said to live n patriarchal societies but for the most part the men are not there. they are working in other countries. and if they are there, they are unemployed. i often think that in indiginous cultures the women did all the work. the men went hunting once in a while usually unsuccessfully, made war and spent their"free" show more time stoned. show less
Offended by the fact that women are never considered as crime suspects, a group of British and American expats cook up a plan to rob a mail train. That sounds like an interesting premise, but I found the execution much less so. Far too many women are involved; I couldn't tell them apart at all. The details of the crime are confusing and not conveyed with a sense of excitement. After about eighty pages, I lost interested and stopped reading. It's too bad; I skipped ahead to the end and felt show more like I would have enjoyed the general arc of the story, but I just couldn't get into it. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 9
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 252
- Popularity
- #90,784
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 22
- Languages
- 3
















