Our Holocaust

by Amir Guttfreund

Other authorsJessica Cohen (Translator)
Hardcover, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

F GUT

Collection

Publication

New Milford, Conn. : Godalming : Toby ; Melia [distributor], 2006.

Description

Amir and Effi collected relatives. With Holocaust survivors for parents and few other 'real' relatives alive, relationships operated under a 'Law of Compression' in which tenuous connections turned friends into uncles, cousins and grandparents. Life was framed by Grandpa Lolek, the parsimonious and eccentric old rogue who put his tea bags through Selektion, and Grandpa Yosef, the neighborhood saint, who knew everything about everything, but refused to talk of his own past. Amir and Effi also collected information about what happened Over There. This was more difficult than collecting relatives; nobody would tell them any details because they weren't yet Old Enough. The intrepid pair won't let this stop them, and their quest for knowledge results in adventures both funny and alarming, as they try to unearth their neighbors' stories. As Amir grows up, his obsession with understanding the Holocaust remains with him, and finally Old Enough to know, the unforgettable cast of characters that populate his world open their hearts, souls, and pasts to him... Translated by Jessica Cohen from the Hebrew Shoah Shelanu.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member polluxtrees
A wonderful book, difficult to put down. Gutfreund has a deft touch with a difficult subject. I tend to avoid literature about the Holocaust, but this was a very, very good read. I've also liked Amos Oz' A Tale of Love and Darkness and Andre Aciman's Out of Egypt and I think their writings share
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similar attributes.
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LibraryThing member booklove64
Very compelling book about remembering the Holocaust. The author makes the point this could happen again and he fears, not those who calmly followed orders for no personal gain, but those for whom everything was allowed with no consequences...the amoral
LibraryThing member sandboxbooks
A young Israeli becomes obssessed by his need to tell the story of Holocaust survivors, both from his family and his neighborhood. An elegantly written book, with contemporary life in Israel interwoven with the death camp accounts. The author fears not those who coldly and efficiently did their
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duty with no personal gain or pleasure, but those who came to understand that the Holocaust allowed them to pursue their basest, most psychopathic and criminal impulses with no restraints or recriminations or accountablity. That segment of humanity is always with us, self-centered and amoral. We must not delude ourselves that the evil of the Holocaust was an aberration.
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LibraryThing member thatotter
I really enjoyed the first two sections of this book. I thought the quality of the writing was excellent, reminding me sometimes of the parts of Bolaño that I liked best. It was surprisingly funny and sharp for a book about the aftermath of the Holocaust. But I found the final section too long,
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too interested in coming to a neat conclusion, and not as well-written as the earlier sections.

If you're strongly affected by detailed stories about what happened during the Holocaust, you might want to skip this book--it contains a lot of those, both factual and fictional.
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Language

Original language

Hebrew

Physical description

407 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

9781592641390
Page: 0.3149 seconds