|
Oh Brother! The Life and Times of Jeff Fazzolari is an authentic heirloom recipe that shares the ingredients of what it takes to make life meaningful, challenging and tasteful. This close-knit Italian family circles the kitchen table with confidence, slapstick humor and mutual joy. Food plays a pivotal role in their lives and pride is felt when the youngest son becomes a noted executive chief at The Gow School. But on January 27, 2009 life went terribly wrong for Jeff and his family.
Prior to that date, the Fazzolari family, known as the “Fuzzys”, was fortunate. They had a secret that kept them above the fray: Love. Love between brothers and sisters, children and parents, even their freaking dogs … a love that comes whole, not in individual pieces. Together they made “Fuzzys’ Jumbut”, a recipe that throws together life, love and laughter. But when Jeff dies, the family loses a core ingredient: the person that binds the family together. The love isn’t enough and the pain is too much. Life isn’t the nice little packagethey were living. Jeff’s death interferes with their love.
Oh Brother! The Life and Times of Jeff Fazzolari will introduce you to a son, a brother, a husband and a dedicated father that was both prankster and poignant human being. This thoughtful, compelling and heartfelt narrative serves to heal their own family aswell as others. This is a book that celebrates and embraces life at 120 miles per hour. When the fuel tank runs out they add the ingredient that Jeff added to all his signature recipes: Love.
Do You Believe in Miracles?
Cliff Fazzolari does, because he's seen medical miracles happen at Women & Children's Hospital of Buffalo, NY.
In Counting on a Miracle, Cliff tells how his own son, Jacob, was saved from a giant, life threatening tumor, but that was just the beginning.
Fazzolari's new book, House of Miracles, features a dozen of his interviews with doctors, patients, and others, chronicling everyday miracles, lives restored and lives lost, and patients brought back from the brink of death by the hospital's dedicated staff.
In an age when many people call actors and fictional characters "heroes," Cliff shows us that real heroes do exist at this remarkable facility.
|
|