Rockville Centre resident is a multi-faceted man

Tony Iovino receives community service award

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Humbled and honored, Oceanside Summer Gazebo Readings founder Tony Iovino received the Long Island Writers’ Guild Community Service Award last Sunday at Manor East in Massapequa.

The award was presented to Iovino in tribute to his exceptional work in showcasing the Long Island Writing community, particularly with the Summer Gazebo Readings program.

Iovino, an attorney, who now lives in Rockville Centre, hosts the summer readings at the Schoolhouse Green on Foxhurst Road each Monday evening in the summer. During each meeting, four published authors read aloud to an average group of 100 people, with each author reading for approximately 10 minutes. The Summer Gazebo Readings, which just completed its fifth year, attracts both teens and adults to its meetings, according to Iovino.

“A number of poet laureates have attended and supported us over the years,” Iovino said about the program. “We also have many writers from the major publishing houses who come and participate.”

With help from his wife Angela – who is president of the Oceanside Public Library Board of Directors – the money Iovino raises from the Summer Gazebo Readings goes directly toward the Kiwanis Club of Oceanside. The Kiwanis Club is a global organization whose goal is to help children and the underprivileged in the community, and the Summer Gazebo Readings program is considered a Kiwanis event.

In addition to this award, Iovino has received several other notable awards for his community work. He was named the Citizen of the Year by the Oceanside Chamber of Commerce in 2008 and Kiwanian of the Year by the Oceanside Kiwanis Club in 2007.

A writer himself, Iovino recently finished a novel, “Notary Public Enemy,” which will be published by Diversion Press. “It was an undertaking, but I considered writing it to be a lot of fun,” Iovino said. In the past, Iovino has written between 20 to 25 poems and essays, which have been featured in print and in online literary magazines including “Clearfield Review” and “SubtleTea.”

While Iovino admits that he didn’t take up professional writing until after college, he says he has developed a passion for it. Some of his favorite novels are of the murder/mystery and legal genres, and he particularly enjoys the works of author John Grisham.

Iovino received his B.A. in History and Economics from the University of Richmond and his J.D. from St. John’s University School of Law. His law firm – Bondi and Iovino – is located in Garden City.

Comments about this story? TSteinert@liherald.com or (516) 569-4000 ext. 282.