Jason Sommer is the author of five poetry collections, most recently Portulans in the University of Chicago's Phoenix Poets Series. He has been recognized with an Anna Davidson Rosenberg Award for poems about the Jewish experience and read from his work at the National Holocaust Memorial Museum's program "Speech and Silence- Poetry and the Holocaust." A former Stanford University Stegner Fellow, he has held a Whiting Foundation writers' fellowship as well as fellowships from the Bread Loaf and Sewanee writers' conferences. With Hongling Zhang, he has published collaborative book-length translations of Chinese fiction- Wang in Love and Bondage- Three Novellas by Wang Xiaobo and The Bathing Women by Tie Ning, which was long-listed for the Man Asian Literary Prize. Sommer lives in St. Louis, Missouri.
Poet Sommer (Portulans) movingly combines a Holocaust memoir
with an intimate account of his relationship with his survivor
father. When, at age 98, his father, Jay, began to lose some of his
memories, Sommer was desperate to find a way to preserve them.
After escaping from a labor camp in Budapest in 1944, Jay had
joined the Russian army and later emigrated to the U.S., where he
got his college degree, had a successful teaching career, and built
a family. In an effort to keep those and earlier memories intact,
Sommer hit upon the idea of showing Jay videos from a trip they had
taken in 2001 to eastern Europe to witness the places "that were
the setting of his Holocaust experiences." As the two revisit these
memories together, the past and present beautifully collide in
evocative prose and excerpts of poetry ("he's penned beneath/ the
stairs of a Budapest apartment house/ for days, in terror") that
whisk readers from the steps of Erzsebet School in Budapest-where
Jay and other survivors began their "struggle toward a new life" in
1945-to the bridge where father and son commemorated the death of
Jay's brother Shmuel, who was killed en route to a Nazi camp. This
stunning tribute isn't to be missed.
-Publishers Weekly, starred review
A father-son journey through the land and memories of the
Holocaust.
Sommer, the author of five poetry collections, recounts a 2001
visit to Eastern Europe with his Hungarian father, Jay, a Holocaust
survivor. Raised in poverty, Jay was sent to a forced labor camp as
the Nazis overtook his homeland. Eventually, he was able to escape
the camp, evading capture until he joined a Soviet army unit toward
the end of the war. The author arranged a trip following the rail
lines that figured heavily in his father's history as well as other
family members who did not survive. Of special interest to Sommer
was the search for a bridge where his uncle, Shmuel, had escaped
the train to Auschwitz, only to be killed by guards. The author
provides an undeniably intriguing tale of travel and remembrance,
filled with fascinating characters and places caught between the
war-torn past and the post-Cold War future. However, the primary
narrative focus is on the strained and highly unusual relationship
between the author, who was raised during a time of relative peace
and prosperity, and his father, aptly described as "an omnivore of
terror" who "suffered the most thorough dissolutions of social
order" and had law and order shift around him, restricting his
life, collecting him for forced labor, while narrowly avoiding what
he feared most, the fate of almost all his family." In exploring
the purpose for his journey and this book, Sommer writes, "I would
have liked my writing to have cleared a path between my father and
me, so we could have had a fuller knowledge of each other." Writing
the book was obviously an act of catharsis for the author, who
often brings up his own search for truth, connection, or some other
personal need he feels but cannot easily put into words.
A worthwhile work of Holocaust remembrance, but readers must be
prepared to journey with the son as well as the father.
-Kirkus Reviews
At first blush, this latest work by poet Sommer (Portulans) would
appear to be similar to other Holocaust memoirs. However, Sommer
takes readers on a different type of journey by exploring his
father's Holocaust experience and giving an account of traveling to
Eastern Europe together in 2001. The goal of their trip was to
learn the exact location where his father's brother, Shmuel, died.
Years later, as his father, Jay, begins to experience cognitive
decline, the author uses videos of their trip to Eastern Europe and
old photographs to stir up memories. This is the poignant story he
tells readers, bringing them from his childhood in the Bronx to
tracing his family's footsteps in Budapest and Munich. Throughout
the book, Sommer provides insight about extended family and their
own Holocaust survival stories, while also offering a glimpse of
his complicated relationship with his father. The author helpfully
includes maps, photographs, and verses of his poetry to help tell
the story. VERDICT A poignant and moving personal history warmly
told through reminisces, poetry, and photographs. It will spark the
curiosity of those interested in Jewish and European history.
-Library Journal
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