My Germany: A Jewish Writer Returns to the World His Parents Escaped

Author:   Lev Raphael
Publisher:   University of Wisconsin Press
ISBN:  

9780299231545


Pages:   236
Publication Date:   30 October 2011
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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My Germany: A Jewish Writer Returns to the World His Parents Escaped


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Overview

Haunted by his parents' horrific suffering and traumatic losses under Nazi rule, Lev Raphael grew up loathing everything German. Those feelings shaped his Jewish identity, his life, and his career. While researching his mother's war years after her death, he discovers a distant relative living in the very city where she had worked in a slave labor camp, found freedom, and met his father. Soon after, Raphael is launched on book tours in Germany and, in the process, redefines himself as someone unafraid to face the past and let it go. Bookmarks, ""Top Ten Nonfiction Titles of 2009""

Full Product Details

Author:   Lev Raphael
Publisher:   University of Wisconsin Press
Imprint:   University of Wisconsin Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.333kg
ISBN:  

9780299231545


ISBN 10:   0299231542
Pages:   236
Publication Date:   30 October 2011
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Raphael s struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. EDGE


Raphael s struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. EDGE


<p> Raphael's struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. -- EDGE


Raphael s struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. EDGE A cleansing, passionate memoir. Kirkus Reviews There is easy grace to this intense memoir about Jewish author Raphael s emotional and cultural reconciliation with Germany. Part genealogical study, part book tour travelogue and part coming-out account, the author s stark portrayal of religious, sexual and literary evolution is a compassionate record of one man s several liberations. Richard Labonte, Bookmarks, Top Ten Nonfiction Titles of 2009 Raphael contributes again to the genre of second-generation Holocaust literature in which he is a pioneer. . . . True to his other works, his book is powerful and captivating to the end, painting vivid pictures of his parents suffering, his hatred of Germany, and eventually his healing and reconciliation. Library Journal Raphael s struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. EDGE A cleansing, passionate memoir. Kirkus Reviews There is easy grace to this intense memoir about Jewish author Raphael s emotional and cultural reconciliation with Germany. Part genealogical study, part book tour travelogue and part coming-out account, the author s stark portrayal of religious, sexual and literary evolution is a compassionate record of one man s several liberations. Richard Labonte, Bookmarks, Top Ten Nonfiction Titles of 2009 Raphael contributes again to the genre of second-generation Holocaust literature in which he is a pioneer. . . . True to his other works, his book is powerful and captivating to the end, painting vivid pictures of his parents suffering, his hatred of Germany, and eventually his healing and reconciliation. Library Journal Raphael's struggle to emotionally and culturally reconcile with a Germany he could never forgive makes for somber reading. But his struggle to balance his identity as a Jew and a gay man is one even those outside this world can appreciate. -- EDGE A cleansing, passionate memoir. -- Kirkus Reviews There is easy grace to this intense memoir about Jewish author Raphael's emotional and cultural reconciliation with Germany. Part genealogical study, part book tour travelogue and part coming-out account, the author's stark portrayal of religious, sexual and literary evolution is a compassionate record of one man's several liberations. --Richard Labonte, Bookmarks , Top Ten Nonfiction Titles of 2009 Raphael contributes again to the genre of second-generation Holocaust literature in which he is a pioneer. . . . True to his other works, his book is powerful and captivating to the end, painting vivid pictures of his parents' suffering, his hatred of Germany, and eventually his healing and reconciliation. -- Library Journal


<p> A cleansing, passionate memoir. -- Kirkus Reviews


Author Information

Lev Raphael has spoken about his work on three continents and has been publishing fiction and prose about the Second Generation for over thirty years —longer than any other American author. His nineteen books include The German Money, Writing a Jewish Life, and Dancing on Tisha B’Av.

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