An acclaimed writer on her mother’s tumultuous life as a Jewish
immigrant in 1930s New York and her life-long guilt when the Holocaust
claims the family she left behind in Latvia A story of love, war,
and life as a Jewish immigrant in the squalid factories and lively
dance halls of New York’s Garment District in the 1930s, My
Mother’s Wars is the memoir Lillian Faderman’s mother was never
able to write. The daughter delves into her mother’s past to tell
the story of a Latvian girl who left her village for America with
dreams of a life on the stage and encountered the realities of her new
world: the battles she was forced to fight as a woman, an immigrant
worker, and a Jew with family left behind in Hitler’s deadly path.
The story begins in 1914: Mary, the girl who will become Lillian
Faderman’s mother, just seventeen and swept up with vague ambitions
to be a dancer, travels alone to America, where her half-sister in
Brooklyn takes her in. She finds a job in the garment industry and a
shop friend who teaches her the thrills of dance halls and the cheap
amusements open to working-class girls. This dazzling life leaves Mary
distracted and her half-sister and brother-in-law scandalized that she
has become a “good-time gal.” They kick her out of their home, an
event with consequences Mary will regret for the rest of her life.
Eighteen years later, still barely scraping by as a garment worker and
unmarried at thirty-five, Mary falls madly in love and has a torrid
romance with a man who will never marry her, but who will father
Lillian Faderman before he disappears from their lives. America is in
the midst of the Depression, Hitler is coming to power in Europe, and
New York’s garment workers are just beginning to unionize. Mary
makes tentative steps to join, despite her lover’s angry opposition.
As National Socialism engulfs Europe, Mary realizes she must find a
way to get her family out of Latvia, and she spends frenetic months
chasing vague promises and false rumors of hope. Pregnant again, after
having submitted to two wrenching back-room abortions, and still
unmarried, Mary faces both single motherhood and the devastating
possibility of losing her entire Eastern European family. Drawing on
family stories and documents, as well as her own tireless research,
Lillian Faderman has reconstructed an engrossing and essential chapter
in the history of women, of workers, of Jews, and of the Holocaust as
immigrants experienced it from American shores.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780807050538
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter