Late Literacy Advocate’s Final Masterpiece: ‘Fighting Prosaic Messages’ Published by Devoted Wife Marilyn Amoroso

The last incredible literary work of the late, noted Literacy Advocate and Professor, Henry C Amoroso Jr, titled FIGHTING PROSAIC MESSAGES, has been published by his loving wife, Marilyn Amoroso.

FIGHTING PROSAIC MESSAGES is a personal history and scholarly look at literacy teaching in America. In it, Henry follows his grandmother’s experience immigrating from Italy to Massachusetts, her own struggles with literacy, the literacy challenges faced by her son, and those faced by our biracial children.

FIGHTING PROSAIC MESSAGES attempts to answer two important questions. What is the nature of failure in America’s educational system? What can we do about it?

Part historical fiction, part memoir, and part philosophy of education, this book begins with a story about a woman’s immigration into the U.S. and how three of her generations struggled in the U.S. school system. The book ends with an analysis of why many students fail in school and what we can do about it. Through story and analysis, this book offers a critique of the U.S. education system in three parts.

Part one imagines what the immigration experience was like in the past and reads like historical fiction. Part two looks at the ensuing three generations in the present and reads like a memoir. Part three gleans lessons from the story as a whole for what we can do better in the future.

In the “historical fiction” part, a Sicilian woman named Rose emigrates to the U.S. at the turn of the twentieth century. Knowing no English and being illiterate but armed with moral intelligence, she struggles in this strange world of the free, rubs shoulders with some of the great thinkers of her day, and discusses the nature of education with them. She’s one of the many “prosaic” heroes history books and schools sometimes forget.

In the “memoir” part, Rose’s son Henry, the author’s father, drops out of school in the eighth grade to help his single mom by selling newspapers; he never thought he was smart enough for school anyway. His son Henry Jr. goes all the way to school to obtain a PhD but struggles to find a voice along the way. Henry Jr.’s son Justin was seemingly born with an expressive “voice,” but in his shuffle to conform to the school system, almost lost it. In these 3 cases, we see 3 types of students who often fail in school in general.

In the final “analysis” part, the book reflects on these “prosaic” cases to understand why so many U.S. students fail. The theme that emerges parallels the traditions of Rousseau, Dewey, and Montessori: students at heart are good and educators are most effective when they treat them as such; students learn best by doing, and this includes moral “doing”; and students become intrinsically motivated to learn if allowed to think critically, creatively, and to find their voices.

Henry C. Amoroso Jr’s FIGHTING PROSAIC MESSAGES has garnered rave reviews since it was published. A reviewer, J.A, said: ”If democracy depends on an informed citizenry, the questions this book raises about school failure are critical to the future of our nation.”

Another reader, Michelle Fred, said: “I’m passionate about effective education, so I would like to see the solutions the author proffered to the problems plaguing the current education system. It’s also good to know that he gave lots of real-life examples to support his arguments.”

Henry C Amoroso Jr’s FIGHTING PROSAIC MESSAGES is available for purchase on Amazon.

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