The year was 1946. A young, educated, multilingual arrived in the United
States to be reunited with her husband, an American officer whom she
married in Italy at the end of the war. Her journey begins on ship
filled with the wives of other American soldiers, all doing the same
thing. The "abnormality" of that trip could not have been anticipated.
Oh, América draws a picture of this era in a lucid and humorous way
and shows a nation as large as it is contradictory, representing an
entire generation of women that rose through the ruins of World War II.
Marcella Olschki may have only written two novels, but they proved to be
enough to consider her one of the most notable names in Italian
literature of the 20th century.