About the Book
About the Book
Paradise In Brooklyn
Paradise in Brooklyn is a memoir, one that places you inside the raw, unpredictable reality of life in late 1960s Brooklyn, where survival often meant bending the rules. Don and Michele are raising two young daughters while working exhausting jobs by day and risking everything by night, stealing scrap copper, known as “Mongo,” from beneath the docks just to get by. But when they unknowingly cross the wrong people, including the Santoro brothers, survival quickly turns into something far more dangerous.
Forced to run before they’re ready, they retreat to the edge of Brooklyn, hiding out in an abandoned railroad yard while trying to repair a sailboat they don’t yet know how to sail. It’s a place no one would choose to live- dark, isolated, and forgotten- but it becomes their only refuge. There, they exist under the constant threat of being found, not just by the mob, but by authorities searching for someone within their growing circle.
What begins as isolation slowly transforms as a cast of unlikely characters finds their way to them: runaways, veterans, drifters, and outcasts, each carrying their own story. At first, they’re strangers bound only by circumstance. But over time, something deeper forms. In a place defined by hardship, they create connection, loyalty, and an unexpected sense of belonging.
At its core, this memoir is about transformation. Not just of a place, but of people, how a desolate railroad yard becomes a home, how strangers become family, and how, in the most unlikely corner of Brooklyn, something resembling paradise is built against all odds.