Memories from Cherry Harvest

by Amy Wachspress

Paperback, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

F WAC MEM

Publication

Soft Skull Press (2012), 400 pages

Description

"When I remember Russia, I ache with longing for the village of my birth, where the beloved grandparents magically produced candy in a handshake and told stories of long ago when God spoke to humans and enchantments filled the world." So begins Amy Wachspress's historical novel, spanning 70 years and five continents,Memories from Cherry Harvest. Two Jewish sisters, born in Russia shortly before the Communist Revolution, are forced to flee the pogroms and persecution and travel with their parents to British-occupied Palestine. The girls' parents befriend a widower with two children and join forces, creating a blended family. When the girls are teenagers, World War II tears the family apart, sending the girls separately to France and America. Their lives unfold in tandem: babies are born, friendships forged, and cherry pies baked, despite the brutal backdrop of the Holocaust. The family grows into the next generation, with one of the daughters, an artist drawn to a bohemian lifestyle, who surrounds herself with a multicultural, colorful circle of friends the likes of which her ancestors could not have imagined. Subsequently, the artist's daughter is even more evolved and attuned to the world's unfair oppressions. She turns her passion to providing aid to Salvadoran refugees fleeing the torture and death squads in their homeland, just as her own grandmother once fled the pogroms of Russia. As she follows her vocation of reversing the damage that torturers inflict on their victims, she must overcome a past-life trauma that haunts her very core. Memories from Cherry Harvest explores the physics of memory, and shows how the tenacity of good can ultimately withstand and overcome the memory of tragedy.… (more)

Media reviews

Library Journal
Winner of the 2012 Fabri Literary Prize, this semiautobiographical family saga chronicles three generations of strong women, beginning with sisters Ruth and Rivka, who escape the pogroms of Russia for Palestine as World War I ends. Sympathy for oppressed Arabs draws the teenage Rivka into the
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Communist Party until she’s arrested then leaves for France. Simultaneously, Ruth emigrates to the United States. As the novel unfolds, readers follow the sisters’ experiences during World War II and the Holocaust. Ruth’s daughter Rina grows up to be an artist immersed in the left-wing counterculture in 1960s New York. Rina’s own daughter, Miriam, moves to Arizona, where she becomes involved with the sanctuary movement helping Salvadoran refugees. VERDICT: Each generation here is motivated by a sense of righteous indignation concerning the politically oppressed. It is as if some supernatural power guides them into political action. Indeed, the author suggests that this family continues to be motivated by spirits from past lives. Like Julia Alvarez’s In the Time of the Butterflies and Doris Lessing’s Martha Quest novels, this story about fighting the injustices of the 20th century will engage readers of politically charged fiction.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

400 p.; 8.9 inches

ISBN

1593764405 / 9781593764401

Local notes

2015-16 Reading Circle selection
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