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Seventy Times Seven
Salvatore Sapienza

Haworth Press, 2006 - 261 pages

average customer review:based on 12 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





A Necessary Perspective

Salvatore Sapienza embarks on a daunting task with Seventy Times Seven: a tale about the healthy mingling of sex and spirituality. In a society where sex--especially homosexual love--is often portrayed as evil, books such as this one fulfill a critical need. Many of us struggle to perceive God as the source of love rather than punitive rage as taught by people more concerned with hell than emotional or spiritual health. Seventy Times Seven has its erotic moments but is not an erotic novel. Instead Sapienza gives us an enjoyable and often humorous story peopled with likable, realistic characters who demonstrate how acceptance of one's sexuality augments rather than detracts from healthy faith; hating any aspect of ourselves diminishes our ability to love others. While the writing can be simplistic, Mr. Sapienza has accomplished something very good with this novel.


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a voice teacher and early music fan

My first love is music, but I am also an avid reader,though I don't usually bother to review books, only music. However, I just felt that I had to comment on this wonderfully written book by Salvatore Sapienza. Upon scanning the outside cover for the first time the quote from 'The Confessions of Saint Augustine'really drew me into all of it: "Give me chastity and self-restraint, but not just right now." That thought truly speaks to all of us faced with everyday temptations in our lives. Each chapter of this book begins with a quotation, usually from the bible, that sets the tone for the ensuing chapter.
One thing that impressed me was how strongly the author's characterizations were, no matter how few times the character appeared in the book, I left it all feeling that I had a real knowledge of that person. Even, the mentor priest at Vito's retreat, was clearly understood as he attempted to truly help Vito to make his very important decision, that is to become a priest or follow his 'true' feelings of love for Gabe.
The wrestling of his conscience was a revealing part of the book for me, as a practising Catholic, and not because of the homosexuality, but because Vito was so incredibly sincere and honest and seeking the answer from his God. Just one of many real-life situations in this incredible book.
I kept wondering: "What will Vito decide in a situation that is so wrapped up in 'dogma', sincere though it may be. And how does he know if his feelings for Gabe are real.
A book truly worth reading, regardless of who are what you do or are!!!!!


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The Church and Us



Sapienza, Salvatore. Seventy Times Seven. New York: Harrington Park Press, 2006.

Amos Lassen and Literary Pride



Seventy Times Seven, Salvatore Sapienza's first novel explores the Catholic religion and homosexuality. The main character is a Catholic brother and a teacher and his story is told by a real life former brother and an openly gay man. It is set in the early 1990s and we find Brother Vito Fortunato close to his final vows as a brother in the Catholic church. He is torn between his spirituality and his gay sexuality. While teaching catechism, he struggles with his own issues of forgiveness--forgiving Mother Church, forgiving the homosexual community but most of all forgiving himself. Yet there was that summer when he volunteered at a San Francisco AIDS center and fell in love with Gabriel, a recently divorced landscaper, and this has caught Vito between sexual identity and his personal idealism. It takes him on the path of attempting to change the views of the church on homosexuality and Aids.

Sapienza, himself, is a former Catholic brother of the Marist Order who taught high school English. He worked alongside Father Mychal Judge, the chaplain to the New York Fire Department who died in the 9/11 attacks. Included in the book is Sapienza's essay on his experiences with Father Judge.

The title for the book comes from the Biblical passage that Jesus taught us to forgive those who have wronged us "seventy times seven times." While Vito teaches this ideal of forgiveness he realizes that he must also adhere to this adage. How does one integrate his religious beliefs with his sexual desires? And this is what punctuates the novel all the way through. He does this by not only using quotes from Scripture but with song lyrics from Madonna and Prince--two artists who merged these two worlds both provocatively and in a groundbreaking manner. Alongside that problem Vito also struggles with an idealism that drives him to change the ways of the Church.

Vito yearns for a quiet gay life--one of more than pride parades and bars. He wants to celebrate his desire for a same-sex meaningful relationship. His candor is real, yet delicate and his prose tells the story of salvation. There are twists and turns and the reader is engrossed from start to finish. And the story is moving, touching those parts of the gay psyche that makes us proud that Sapienza has bothered to write his story. The book took me to places I have never been and the prose made the trip a pleasure. The conflicts are real, present, and important. This is not a book about religion but about the dignity of man. The insight that the book gives, allows us to embrace ourselves and is this not what the spirit tells us to do?

When I first began reading, I thought that I would be reading about a closeted priest who in his struggles to accept himself led a life of pain and shame. But I was wrong. Being gay is not the struggle here. Rather it is the incorporation of his sexual nature to his spirituality. The men Vito meets denounce religion, just as the Church does homosexuality. The period in which the novel is set was that time when sexuality and spirituality were juxtaposed. Many went dancing shirtless at night and to church the next morning. Sexual beings could also be spiritual--there is no mutual exclusivity here. One would think that a book of this nature would be a heavy read but it is far from that. It is a delight and shows us that faith in the human spirit can rule out any adversary.

I cannot recommend this book highly enough. When I finished it, I felt renewed and cleansed and that I had just read a really fascinating book. We have had so much about the abuses of the Catholic church that to me it was a special treat to read about someone who knowingly and consciously went against it. Although one man can't do it all, one can crack the door open.

AMOS LASSEN



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A Thoroughly Satisfying Read

Seventy Times Seven was a tough read for me. As a somewhat bitterly ex-catholic gay boy who has been battling HIV for eleven years, I found that many parts of Sal Sapienza's novel hit very close to home. After I reached the end, though, I recognized that the journey had been well worth it, despite the emotional bumps I hit along the way.

The story's main character is Vito, a cute gay Italian boy who is just getting ready to take final vows in his Catholic brotherhood. The book chronicles his struggle to incorporate his religious calling with his more sensual, secular urgings. To be honest, I liked Vito. I wanted to sleep with Vito, but I didn't identify with Vito - not one bit. I empathized much more with his best friend Tim, a light-hearted hedonist who seems to take great delight in leading his conflicted friend astray. My guess is that most gay guys who, like me, reached young adulthood in the eighties will also more closely identify with Tim. To me, he is more or less the embodiment of gay eighties culture - chastened somewhat by the looming threat of AIDS, but still trying to live life to the fullest.

And speaking of gay eighties cultural references - Sapienza uses them liberally, but not gratuitously, throughout the book. He weaves the pop songs and mega-stars from that time right into the story, using them as metaphors for the various issues that Vito struggles with along the way. This gives the novel the quality of a modern-day parable, and though I'm sure I'm not the only reader who wanted to shake Vito by the shoulders from time to time and scream "Are you out of your mind?", I found his crisis, as a whole, to be genuine and believable.

A fine first novel by Sal Sapienza. It had a nice, steady pace, well developed characters and just enough pathos to engage readers emotionally without carrying them into the realm of soap opera. Seventy Times Seven roughed me up a bit emotionally, but in the end it left me feeling hopeful about myself and about life in general. Can one ask any more of a novel than that?


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A moving read

Can an openly gay Brother stay true to God and to himself?
That is the spiritual and sexual dilemma that propels Sal Sapienza's novel, "Seventy Times Seven.''
Set in the early 1990s, Sapienza illuminates with sweet elegance and piercing insight the challenges of 27-year-old brother Victor "Vito" Fortunato who teaches religion to 25 freshman at Mount Saint Vincent High, a Catholic school in Brooklyn.
Fortunato isn't your typical brother. Instead of cloaking his sexuality, Vito unleashes it. He celebrates his gay pride. He likes to drink with his guy friends at the bars, dances shirtless. He wears Obsession the cologne and sleeps naked in his comforter. He's even been a third party in a threesome when he was younger.
Basically, Vito is your fun and foxy, good-natured Italian progressive Brother. He hopes that his forward-mentality will change the staid and tradition-driven Catholic church once he becomes a full-fledged priest.
Months before he is to take the final vows to become that priest, Vito decides to volunteer at an AIDS service center in San Francisco. There he meets a divorced landscaper named Gabriel and falls in love. They engage in a romantic and passionate affair and Victor must decide how he really wants to live his life.
The power of the book is how Vito copes with his commitment to God and to himself. By being true to himself, does he betray his higher power? Or by committing "holy" to God, does he dishonor himself?
The book serves as Vito's spiritual guide, as he questions which path to take. He wants to bridge his two worlds and feel complete, fulfilled and devoted to each.
But the book is also the road of forgiveness, which echoes the book's title. In the book's beginning, Vito teaches his class of 14 students, to forgive those who have wronged us which is taken from the Biblical passage.
Besides the internal spiritual tug of war Vito struggles with, I also enjoyed the pop references sprinkled throughout the book which harken back to the early nineties which Sapienza has fun paying tribute to.
We see mentions of a new Fox show "Beverly Hills 90120" and NBC's former "Saved By The Bell." Sapienza also uses songs from Madonna (Like A Prayer) as a literary tool to show the reader Vito's state of mind. (Who better than Madonna can personify the intersection of sexuality and spirituality and that you can have a little of both.) And that is what Vito captures in the book. That it's okay to be gay and religious. You don't have to give up one to have the other in your life.
There aren't many novels that truely explore the state of homosexuality in the Catholic Church the way Sapienza does.
He doesn't crucify the church but he explains through Vito's eyes what is wrong with the Church and how it needs to change to better encompass and represent all of its members, gay or not.
Seventy Time Seven is a tender and touching read by first-time author Sapienza. Gay and religious fiction would benefit with more of his spiritual tales.




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reviews: page 1, 2, 3



"Give me chastity and self-restraint, but not just right now."
?The Confessions of Saint Augustine

"Jesus instructed us to forgive those who have wronged us seventy times seven times," Brother Vito Fortunato teaches the boys in his high school religion class, but it's Vito himself who has the most trouble with forgiveness: trying to forgive the Church, the gay community, and most of all, himself. Just a few months from his final vows as a Brother in the Catholic Church, Vito finds himself at a crossroads, torn between his spirituality and his sexuality as a fully out and proud gay man. Will a summer of volunteer work at an AIDS center in San Francisco?and a love affair with Gabriel, a recently divorced landscaper?help Vito decide his calling?and his future?

Seventy Times Seven is a poignant, sexy, funny, and romantic novel set in the early 1990s about a young man's struggle to integrate his religious beliefs with his sexual desires. The gap between sexuality and spirituality is punctuated throughout the novel with quotes from the Scripture, and from song lyrics from Prince and Madonna, artists who merged the two worlds in provocative and groundbreaking fashion. Vito struggles too, with the idealism that drives his desire to change the archaic ways of the Catholic Church and its views on AIDS and homosexuality.

An excerpt from Seventy Times Seven: "Come on, let's go in," Tim implored outside the Christopher Street video store. "It'll be a riot. I know you're a Brother, but you don't have to do anything, just watch. But, whatever you do, don't make me laugh. They're hardcore in there."

Tim has always been able to persuade me to take risks. He took me into my first gay bar, Uncle Charlie's in the Village, when I was seventeen years old (the legal drinking age in New York was eighteen at the time, so we didn't look out of place). Two years later, we snorted coke off of his Barney's credit card in the bathroom of the Roxy. He later was a part of my first threesome experience with some guy we met at the Spike. There was one risk, however, that Tim was unsuccessful in persuading me to take, and that was leaving religious life. Taking me into the video store that night required little effort on his part.

Sal Sapienza's first novel, Seventy Times Seven, is an entertaining and enlightening look at the struggle many gay men experience as their try to reconcile their religion with their sexual natures.


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