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JW: 'the struggles of every immigrant child'

"...Chapman illuminates the struggles of every immigrant child in a fictionalized account of her own mother’s experiences. Sent out of Germany at age 12 in 1938, Edith goes to live with an uncle’s family in the U.S. Her aunt, though happy to have the stipend the family receives for hosting her niece, treats her like a servant, not a relative; she is an outsider at school and must register as ...

Had Anne Frank lived

Memoirist Berthe Meijer A new memoir by Berthe Meijer, a Holocaust survivor who, at the age of six, was an inmate at Bergen Belsen along with Anne Frank, "continues the tale of Holocaust victims where the famous diary leaves off." The book, Life After Anne Frank, tells of Meijer's acquaintance with Anne Frank. Meijer claims she remembers Frank's attempts to comfort the small children in the camps by telling stories. ...

Chicago Tribune: 'Not comfortable…but convincing'

"Is It Night or Day?" By Fern Schumer Chapman Farrar Straus Giroux, $16.99, ages 10-14 In 1942, four years after the novel's opening, Edith, now 16, sits by Lake Michigan, having just heard about her family's deaths in Germany. Fern Schumer Chapman tells the story of her mother's life from a child's point of view. The story recognizes, for instance, how exciting shipboard events and sightseeing in New York might ...

On trauma and writing

Anne Frank "I can shake off everything if I write," Anne Frank wrote in her diary in April 1944. "My sorrows disappear, my courage is reborn. But, and that is the great question, will I ever be able to write something great, will I ever become a journalist or a writer?" Ernest Hemingway "We are all bitched from the start," wrote Ernest Hemingway in a 1934 letter to F.Scott Fitzgerald, ...

'Mutterland' reading in Rüsselsheim's synagogue

The German edition of "Motherland" I just received this email from my German friend, Christina Schreck, a resident of my mother's home town, Stockstadt am Rhein: "I want to tell you about 'Motherland-Reading' in Rüsselsheim yesterday evening. There were the two ladies from the theater in Rüsselsheim who acted out a dialogue from your book, Mutterland. Do you remember, it was similar to the reading in Rüsselsheim in 2006 during ...

Germany's Secret Society

In an ongoing correspondence, a member of the German Society to Preserve Jewish Culture repeatedly invited a Jewish man, who had fled his hometown of Warfelden when he was 14, to return to Germany for a visit. The Jewish man refused, stating that he would never return because former Nazis still lived in the town: In one letter, he listed the names of those he believed were Nazis. Eventually, the ...

3/16/2010: A day I never thought would arrive

In 1938, my grandparents, sensing the growing anti-Semitism in Germany, sent my mother to live in America, all by herself. She was twelve years old. She was part of an unknown American rescue operation later named "the One Thousand Children," which sought to place child refugees in foster families to escape Nazi persecution. The children knew little of what was happening to them, and my mother would not know her ...

Snap out of it?

A recent New York Times (Sunday, Feb. 28, 2010) review of Dani Shapiro’s new memoir, Devotion, underscores the general insensitivity and lack of understanding of trauma. Here is the link to the review: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/books/review/Newman-t.html The book captures Shapiro’s discontent, despite the fact that her life is going well: After two failed marriages, she has a husband she adores; her ill son now is recovered; she has a beautiful home and ...

Thanks, Barbara Bietz, for the blog interview!

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 Fern Schumer Chapman - Is it Day or Night? Please welcome author Fern Schumer Chapman. Junior Library Guild has selected her new book, Is It Night or Day? (March 2010), as a spring title. In a starred review, Booklist called the work ''powerful and eloquent,'' adding, ''as with the best writing, the specifics about life as a young immigrant are universal.'' A prequel to Chapman's first ...

'The instinct to protect their young'

Ruth Kluger's memoir, "Still Alive" Ever since she turned 12 years old in 1938, my mother suffered with a profound sense of rejection because her parents chose to send her to safety in America. Throughout her life, my mother continued to see this act through the lens of a child. She felt her parents didn't love her enough to keep her in Germany. She didn't blame Hitler for her situation; ...