Survivor Story: Punks and Liars

“Marching from the synagogue to the railroad station, we were tripped up by big stones laid by punks. Soldiers said we were being sent to Kenya, Bolivia, or Madagascar, but when we saw the cattle cars, we knew they were lying. It was the last transport to Auschwitz.” Read about two Holocaust survivors, German Jewish newlyweds sent to America by their parents to have children to “save our people,” in One Person’s Loss. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

Fellow citizens turned against their Jewish neighbors

Berlin, 1937. Jewish newlyweds flee Germany for Brooklyn on the eve of the Nazi slaughter

What I’m Reading: Never Simple

My Amazon and Goodreads review of Never Simple: A Memoir by Liz Scheier (Rating 4) – Ambivalent. Grieving the death of a parent with whom one had fraught relationship is harder than the “clean” mourning that follows the end of a primarily loving one. In Never Simple: A Memoir, Liz Scheier tries to come to terms with a mother who smothered her with love, but was also physically and emotionally abusive, a liar (including about who Liz’s father was), financially dependent, combative, and eventually afflicted with dementia. I read the book with personal interest. My mother, while not physically abusive, was in most other ways a replica of Judith Scheier. I also read it as a writer (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), looking for the narrative’s literary arc. My reaction to the book, like Liz’s feelings toward her mother, was “ambivalent.” On the downside, Scheier presents her own life in repetitive detail, sacrificing the book’s momentum in her attempts to convince readers of her unfair treatment. We get it; no reruns needed. On the upside, in the final chapter, after her mother dies, Scheier empathically recognizes, “She was both dealt a bad hand and played that hand badly.” Of their relationship, she concludes, “You can still love someone who has caused you a lot of harm.” Never Simple is both an accusation and an absolution. When life’s injustice meets mental illness, it is indeed “never simple.”

A fraught mother-daughter relationship

Why writers read: “Reading makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something, learned something, become a better person.” – Nora Ephron

Learn History Through Fiction: Stamp Out Genocide

An Inverted Jenny, America’s most valuable stamp, just sold at auction for $2 million. Only 100 copies of the 24-cent stamp were printed in 1918 before a mistake — the plane is upside down — was detected. In the novel One Person’s Loss, an elderly man’s passion for stamp collecting helps a young wife’s parents escape from Berlin during the Holocaust and traces what happens to her husband’s brother, a Resistance fighter. While the U.S. failed to end WW2 sooner or admit those fleeing Nazi persecution, history shows some courageous Americans helped to save lives. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

From 24 cents to $2 million in value

Berlin, 1937. Jewish newlyweds flee Germany for Brooklyn before the Nazi slaughter begins

Webb Wonders

“Webb [telescope] can also see further back in time [than Hubble] — a mind-bending thought. The light from this galaxy [Stephan’s Quintet] traveled through space for 40 million years before reaching Webb’s mirrors, which means we’re seeing it as it looked 40 million years ago. Webb is showing us the earliest moments in our universe’s history, fossilized in light.” (A Beginner’s Guide to Looking at the Universe by Kate LaRue, The New York Times Magazine, 11/12/23) “Fossilized in Light” — A metaphoric title for a story?

Stephan’s Quintet photographed by the Webb Telescope

What I’m Reading: The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store

My Amazon and Goodreads review of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (Rating 3) – Cluttered. The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride is the story of pre-WWII Chicken Hill, a poor area in Pottstown, Pennsylvania inhabited by Jews and Negroes. Among the “good” Jews are Chona, the generous proprietress of the title establishment, and her open-minded husband, Moshe, a theater entrepreneur. Among the “good” Negroes are Nate, a hard-working man with a past, and his good-hearted and loyal wife Addie, who have taken in Dodo, their bright but deaf orphaned nephew who the State wants to cart off to an “educational” mental institution. The town itself harbors many “bad” bigots, most notably the despised but powerful Doc Roberts. The collusion of Negroes and Jews to save Dodo drives the story, but what should be a propulsive tale is instead a novel cluttered with less-than-minor characters, confusing plot fragments, and digressions that merely show off the author’s wit. McBride needs an editor with the chutzpah to tell him to cut three-quarters of the self-indulgent prose. As a novelist myself (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I’ve learned that at least ninety-percent of the fascinating (to me) information I discover in my research should remain in my notes. Facts serve fiction when they further character and plot. Otherwise, they belong in engaging nonfiction tracts. The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store is somewhat redeemed by the touching Epilogue, but it doesn’t justify the hours spent reading what precedes it. If you enjoyed McBride’s Deacon King Kong, you’ll probably like The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store. If, like me, you were irritated by the former, I expect you’ll be impatient with his latest book too.

A community unites to save a boy

Why writers read: “My alma mater was books, a good library I could spend the rest of my life reading, just satisfying my curiosity.” – Malcolm X

Belated Halloween Question: Why Do Witches Have Green Faces?

There are as many answers to the question of why witches have green faces as there are warts on their noses. Here are some possible explanations:
Theory One: Witches were said to concoct herbal potions. Herbs (the leafy parts of plants) are green.
Theory Two: In the Salem witch trials, suspects were given henbane, a hallucinogenic that turned their skin green, to extract confessions. (The drug-induced “high” may also be the origin of witches flying on broomsticks.)
Theory Three: Green is associated with being sickly, unwholesome, reptilian, and bilious (think of the four medieval humors), all “evil” witchlike characteristics.
Theory Four: Green-skinned witches began with The Wizard of Oz, the first Technicolor movie. MGM used green face paint on Margaret Hamilton, the Wicked Witch of the West, because it was vibrant, scary, and ugly. Before that witches typically had red or orange faces. [In Baum’s books, good witches were pretty, bad witches were ugly. Skin color was not specified.] Want to learn more about the making of The Wizard of Oz movie? Read the novel A Brain, A Heart, The Nerve. More at NOVELS.

Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 Technicolor movie The Wizard of Oz

A fictional biography of the actor who played the Munchkin Coroner