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FAMILY AND CHILDHOOD BOOKS
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Elizabeth McCauslin. By Syren Book Company.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $9.01.
There are some available for $10.86.
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No comments about Recuerdos: Memories of Childhood in Tucson.
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by James Pendleton. By Ivy House Publishing Group.
The regular list price is $23.95.
Sells new for $19.00.
There are some available for $2.32.
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No comments about Missing Pieces.
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Thomas Kiske. By Xlibris Corporation.
Sells new for $20.99.
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No comments about Time Has Its Own Terms.
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Marcel Liebman. By Verso.
The regular list price is $25.00.
Sells new for $10.66.
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3 comments about Born Jewish: A Childhood in Occupied Europe.
- The holocaust is a "popular" topic. I don't mean that in the positive sense, but in the publishing sense. Much has been published on the holocaust, Nazi occupation and the party Hitler hosted. History demands that people write it and people demand to hear "the truth" about the past. "Born Jewish" offers something different, something that isn't necessarily in demand, but is neccessary for the canon of work on the war and aftermath of the holocaust.
Marcel Liebman, for anyone unfamiliar with his other work, is a reknowned Marxist/Leninist/Soviet Union historian and historical analysist. This is clearly, his most personal work, but he does not leave his politics or his academic work at the door. "Born Jewish", as he says, "questions history", not in the sense of the accuracy of the event(Liebman writes how dismayed he is that the world did not fully accept Hannah Arendt's accounts of Jewish collaboration with the Nazi's as having actually happened.) but in the sense of the accuracy of historical accounts of it.
The new perspective Liebman adds is one often obscured by accounts of Nazi occupation and anti-semitism: that class conflict did not dissolve the day the swastika was raised over Europe's cities. In fact, the Nazi's capitalized on the class difference amongst Jewish populations. For Liebman, the horror of his brother's execution at Auschwitz is intimantly connected with the horrors of exploitation and collaboration within the Jewish community.
Liebman composes his memories carefully and beautifully, resisting sacrilization of experiences he realizes must answer to history as much as to his own heart, and criticizing the radical Zionism that he was to see flourish during his lifetime.
The incredible forward by Jacqueline Rose is a great appetite whetter for the book. She sums up the book far better than I ever could: "Amongst other things, this memoir stands as an extraordinary rejoinder to those who insist that Israel is the only and definitive answer to the genocide of the Jews...It is one of the strenghts of [the memoir] that Liebman can be so unerring in this analysis while at the same time acknowledging the point where understanding trails off into uncomprehending terror, where the most painful part of mourning trumps all rational thought."
I highly reccommend this book for anyone who was interested in the slough of memoirs on the subject. It should be read alongside Judith Butler's new book on mourning, violence, 9/11, anti-semitism and the Israel-Palestinian conflict, "Precarious Life".
- Born Jewish: A Childhood In Occupied Europe by graphically authored by Marcel Liebman and deftly translated by Liz Heron is a vivid memoir of one man's childhood tale of Nazi control, familial struggle, and the betrayal he faced from more powerful Jews in times already hard. As a revealing and historically important biographical account of international history during the second world war, Born Jewish is an invaluable documentation which is very highly recommended for historians and laymen alike, as each and all may take some interest and understanding in this book. Born Jewish is a compelling and valued addition to the growing library of Holocaust literature so fundamentally necessary if the world is never again to experience genocide on such a massive and methodical scale.
- This is a spellbinding account of a Jewish teenager in Belgium, during the war. The second of four boys in a loving Jewish family in Brussels, Liebman gives density and texture to the anxieties, terrors, and perils of life under the Nazis. Always on the run, sometimes together, sometimes apart, Liebman is a superb observer of the venalities and kindnesses that accompany him through these tragic days. It is also a compelling coming of age story. All except the last chapter, which takes advantage of his survivor's status to mount a soap box against racism, with a special target being Zionism (hence Jacqueline Rose's breathless intro). Even aside from its polemics, the chapter feels like it is tacked on to what is otherwise a superb addition to Holocaust memoirs.
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Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Winifrey Foley. By ISIS Audio Books.
The regular list price is $24.95.
Sells new for $20.32.
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No comments about No Pipe Dreams for Father (Reminiscence).
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Spiro Ganas. By Xlibris Corporation.
Sells new for $20.99.
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1 comments about My American Education.
- I was not very satisfied with my purchase of this so-called "book." It seems as though the author wanted to write a book but did not want to dedicate the time. On the positive side, the author did find a good way to keep his old homework assignments from gathering dust.
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Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Sam Hair. By Creative Arts Book Company.
The regular list price is $13.95.
Sells new for $7.90.
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1 comments about Castle Park.
- Sam Hair's memoir is an engrossing, almost cinematic account of his well-lived life. Beautifully written, the story is told through vignettes, strung together through one to two page reminiscences. His story captures an era that has now passed, told vibrantly and honestly. Well worth reading and hard to put down.
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Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Derick Bingham. By Ambassador-Emerald International.
The regular list price is $19.99.
Sells new for $11.98.
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No comments about The Hawthorne Scent.
Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Laura Shaine Cunningham. By ISIS Large Print Books.
The regular list price is $26.95.
Sells new for $11.79.
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5 comments about Sleeping Arrangements.
- Like another reader, I was drawn to the unusual cover of this book--a sweet lil' girl's face superimposed over a faded shot of two older men--in these pedophiliactic times of Michael Jackson and Catholic priests, I assumed it was yet another sad story of abuse. Wronnnngg! This is so outrageously funny that you can almost laugh through the sad passages, while still appreciating the depth of tragedy that befell Shaine's unusual childhood. Her uncles really did sound like a couple of Marx brothers, but the love this odd family shared always shines. I'd teach it in my high school classes, but a few passages here and there probably make it questionable--although the haunting description of her continuing search for her father would resonate with many kids. A great find that I stumbled on while hunting for something else at B and Noble.
- This book's emphasis on prurient material turned me off. Also, the "characters" did not seem to behave in an age appropriate manner, which led me to wonder if the author didn't exaggerate many of the escapades described in the book.
- I cannot wait to read more of her work. I loved this book! I loved her writing. This is a must read!
- Very well written. I felt I had met these people. The writer's words flow smoothly, and I had to slow myself down or the book would have ended too soon. Some of things very young Lily and friend did were hair-raising (in a dark park, cavorting with perverts). What I liked best about this book were her uncles, particularly Uncle Gabe. In fact, I have now purchased Laura Cunningham's book "A Place in the Country" so I can read more about her uncles. I enjoy memiors that deal with unconventional families that provide a nurturing environment and a great deal of love, and this book is that sort of memior.
- I found myself struggling to finish this book. I almost gave up several times. The first several pages were quite good then it looses steam.
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Posted in Family and Childhood (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Inge Myrick. By Acacia Publishing, Inc..
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $12.00.
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No comments about The Other Side.
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Recuerdos: Memories of Childhood in Tucson
Missing Pieces
Time Has Its Own Terms
Born Jewish: A Childhood in Occupied Europe
No Pipe Dreams for Father (Reminiscence)
My American Education
Castle Park
The Hawthorne Scent
Sleeping Arrangements
The Other Side
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