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My Father's Compass: Leadership Lessons for an Immigrant Son

My Father's Compass is a book you will not want to put down. Not only does it tell a fascinating story, it reveals the power of faith, family, friends, and country and the lessons of life while serving others above self. It is a dynamic and inspirational exploration of lessons of leadership at its deepest roots, and a glimpse into the soul of an Italian-American who has inherited a strong and enduring passion for both his heritage and the nation that too many of us take for granted.

Countless Italian immigrants passed through Ellis Island, known to many as the "Island of Tears", from 1892 to 1934. These peasant farmers abandoned their lifestyle of hardships to follow their dream of prosperity and freedom. The author takes you on a personal journey with his family from the moment they walked down the hills of their Abruzzi village in Italy, to the arduous crossing of the Atlantic, to their first glimpse of the welcoming Statue of Liberty, and finally, to their settling in Northeastern Ohio.

This is a story about Perry Enio Martini, an immigrant who crossed an ocean come to a new land to find freedom and a better life. It is also a story about his father Vincenzo, whose vision sparked the quest to America, and on the other end of the timeline, his son Perry J. Martini, who shares the lessons he learned from both of them in the pages of this book. But even more important, it is a story about America.

The Martini family made their crossing in 1927 on a passenger liner named after their countryman, the Cristoforo Colombo. On that vessel, 16-year-old Perry searched his soul for his own "compass bearing," a metaphor the author revisits throughout the book. And as he movingly reveals, his own American journey as a successful career naval officer is a result of the course that was set on his father's compass, an Italian immigrant who became an American first and consequently a bonafide member of the Greatest Generation.