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Aleigh Acerni

Down the Rabbithole

Bartolomeo Vanzetti (left), handcuffed to Nicola Sacco (right). Dedham, Massachusetts Superior Court, 1923. This photo was taken in 1923 when Sacco was on the 23rd day of a hunger strike. Source: Boston Public Library

Sometimes when I’m editing a story, a single sentence can send me down a rabbithole of research that becomes just as fascinating as the story I’m working on.

This morning, a story sent me on the hunt for more information about two men named Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. I’d never heard the story of the two Italian immigrants, thought to have been wrongly convicted of murder during the Red Scare in the 1920s, a time when foreigners were looked on with hostility and suspicion. Their plight received international attention, including a privately-funded campaign to plead for their pardon or a retrial. (Those efforts failed.)

The men’s commingled ashes are part of a collection at the Boston Public Library.

It’s quite a story, and it feels particularly relevant in today’s globalized society. This experience is just one reason I love writing and editing so very much. It fuels my untamed sense of curiosity! What rabbitholes of research have you explored lately?

July 15, 2017 · Leave a Comment · Filed Under: Why I Love Writing and Editing ·

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Aleigh, I'm practically in tears reading this. An AWESOME job! There's not a word to be tweaked. Thanks for an amazing job." — Laurie Prince, editor, Queens Magazine

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