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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Susan ResnickPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Globe Pequot Press Dimensions: Width: 14.50cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.80cm Weight: 0.025kg ISBN: 9780762780389ISBN 10: 076278038 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 02 October 2012 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsSusan Kushner Resnick speaks for a whole generation of American baby-boomer Jews who grew up terrified, heartbroken, and riveted by stories of the Holocaust--a connection we could neither embrace or relinquish. Through a passionate fifteen-year friendship with a survivor she met quite randomly in a Boston JCC, Resnick makes the connection between their generation and ours simple and real. Sharing this journey with her--one which is no longer possible, as the last of the survivors die--fills a need many of us have lived with since childhood. Resnick's humor, elegant writing, and almost Anne Frank-like combination of sweetness and sassiness made this the first Holocaust-related book I have enjoyed, or could even bear to read, in many decades. --Marion Winik, author of The Glen Rock Book of the Dead, and First Comes Love You Saved Me, Too is a soulful story about two unlikely companions--a young mother and an elderly Holocaust survivor--and their complicated, hilarious, and extraordinary friendship. With razor sharp wit and a compassionate eye, Resnick deftly weaves together the personal and the historical in this heartbreaking, yet uplifting memoir. This book reminded me of why we are here--to help ease the suffering of others and to fearlessly love one another to the end of time. -Mira Bartok, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for The Memory Palace <br> Susan Kushner Resnick speaks for a whole generation of American baby-boomer Jews who grew up terrified, heartbroken, and riveted by stories of the Holocaust--a connection we could neither embrace or relinquish. Through a passionate fifteen-year friendship with a survivor she met quite randomly in a Boston JCC, Resnick makes the connection between their generation and ours simple and real. Sharing this journey with her--one which is no longer possible, as the last of the survivors die--fills a need many of us have lived with since childhood. Resnick's humor, elegant writing, and almost Anne Frank-like combination of sweetness and sassiness made this the first Holocaust-related book I have enjoyed, or could even bear to read, in many decades. --Marion Winik, author of The Glen Rock Book of the Dead, and First Comes Love You Saved Me, Too is a soulful story about two unlikely companions--a young mother and an elderly Holocaust survivor--and their complicated, hilarious, and extraordinary friendship. With razor sharp wit and a compassionate eye, Resnick deftly weaves together the personal and the historical in this heartbreaking, yet uplifting memoir. This book reminded me of why we are here--to help ease the suffering of others and to fearlessly love one another to the end of time. -Mira Bartok, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for The Memory Palace <br> Resnick expertly ... intersperses bits and pieces of Aron's life in the camps with her feelings about Judaism, her family life and her steadfast belief that the world should do right by her friend, a man who had suffered more than enough. . . . Resnick's compassionate prose captures the voice and soul of Aron, ensuring that his memories will continue long after the number '141324' has disappeared. A poignant, memorable story of friendship and of a period in time that should never be forgotten. -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review In well-executed, second-person prose, Resnick speaks directly to the elderly Aron Lieb--a virtually family-less Holocaust survivor whom she befriends--as he lies on his deathbed in a nursing home. Short vignettes skip back and forth through time, covering the history of their relationship: Resnick's struggle with Jewish identity ( I figured as long as I stayed ambivalent about being Jewish, I might not get killed by the Nazis the next time they came ) and Aron's own history before, during, and after the war. The writing is sentimental and emotional (culminating in Who saved whom? ) as much as it is honest and informative; in telling Aron's story, Resnick unapologetically criticizes both the incompetence of elder-care facilities as well as the failure of Jewish communal organizations to help a person who, after a life of hardship, deserves a break. This painful memoir is not easya You Saved Me, Too is a soulful story about two unlikely companions--a young mother and an elderly Holocaust survivor--and their complicated, hilarious, and extraordinary friendship. With razor sharp wit and a compassionate eye, Resnick deftly weaves together the personal and the historical in this heartbreaking, yet uplifting memoir. This book reminded me of why we are here--to help ease the suffering of others and to fearlessly love one another to the end of time. -Mira Bartok, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for The Memory Palace <br> This book will make you uncomfortable. It's not simply the horror of what Aron Lieb, who died at 91 in 2011, endured during the Holocaust. That story, or some variation of it, you probably know already. But the struggle to ensure that Aron's end-of-life days would be comfortable, dignified, and above all companioned--that's a lesser-known tale of survivor experience. That is Susan Kushner Resnick's key contribution--to the literature, and to Aron's life. --Erika Dreifus, author of Quiet Americans: Stories <br> Susan Kushner Resnick speaks for a whole generation of American baby-boomer Jews who grew up terrified, heartbroken, and riveted by stories of the Holocaust--a connection we could neither embrace or relinquish. Through a passionate fifteen-year friendship with a survivor she met quite randomly in a Boston JCC, Resnick makes the connection between their generation and ours simple and real. Sharing this journey with her--one which is no longer possible, as the last of the survivors die--fills a need many of us have lived with since childhood. Resnick's humor, elegant writing, and almost Anne Frank-like combination of sweetness and sassiness made this the first Holocaust-related book I have enjoyed, or could even bear to read, in many decades. --Marion Winik, author of The Glen Rock Book of the Dead, and First Comes Love <br> In well-executed, second-person prose, Resnick speaks directly to t Author InformationSusan Kushner Resnick teaches creative nonfiction at Brown University. Her most recent narrative nonfiction book, Goodbye Wifes and Daughters (University of Nebraska Press, cloth 2010, paper 2011), won a gold medal for nonfiction from the Independent Publisher's Book Awards and was a finalist for the Montana Book Award, the Western Writers of America Contemporary Nonfiction Award and the High Plains Book Awards. Her first book, Sleepless Days: One Woman's Journey Through Postpartum Depression (St. Martin's Press, cloth 2000, paper 2001), was the first PPD memoir by an American author. She's been a journalist for 26 years, years, reporting most recently for The Providence Journal. She's been published The New York Times magazine, The Boston Globe, Parents, Utne Reader and Montana Quarterly, among other publications. She was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2001 and her work was listed as a notable essay in The Best American Essays 1999. She lives in Massachusetts with her husband and two teenagers. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |