Bernard Wasserstein is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Chicago and a corresponding Fellow of the British Academy. Born in London, he now lives in Amsterdam. His previous books include The Secret Lives of Trebitsch Lincoln (CWA Gold Dagger Prize for Non-fiction), On the Eve- The Jews of Europe Before the Second World War (Yad Vashem International Book Prize), and Barbarism and Civilization- A History of Europe in Our Time.
A fine and deeply affecting work of history and memoir
*Philippe Sands*
This poignant journey of discovery provides some profound insights
into how hatred can be incited and manipulated to destroy
communities, and is all too relevant to what is happening in the
region today.
*Adam Zamoyski*
extraordinarily moving ... Though he has been thinking about the
story and researching it for decades, the writing feels immediate.
The book is part memoir, part history lesson about 'old Europe' as
a battleground between four empires, and part lament for the lost
world of European Jewry. Perhaps the most valuable thing about it
for British readers is its reminder of how lucky we are to have
welcomed refugees to our shores and not to have exported them.
Wasserstein has a deep understanding of places where borders have
violently changed every couple of generations and whole populations
have been massacred as a result of ideology, religion or whim.
*Spectator*
This formidable book takes pride of place among the growing corpus
of literature coming out of the swampy bloodlands. If you want to
understand why hate has been unleashed again in Europe, this is the
indispensable guide
*The Times*
Using the lens of his own family's betrayal, Bernard Wasserstein's
A Small Town in Ukraine revisits one of the country's darkest
moments ... revelatory and dramatic ... [a] noble, nicely detailed
enterprise of historical and familial recovery
*The Telegraph*
he employs a microscope to portray the fates of many through an
account of very few. Near the scene of his grandparents' murder, he
found a memorial to Ukrainian nationalists executed by the Russians
after the Second World War more prominent than a plaque
commemorating the vastly larger number of dead Jews, "as if to
assert that Ukrainians, not Jews, were the true victims of this
history and would have the last word". His anger is just, his book
a finer monument than any plaque.
*Sunday Times*
This is a deeply moving book, beautifully written, all the sadder
now that refugees are again trudging those same roads.
*The Tablet*
a compelling history, which pays tribute to his ancestors while
raising issues that remain tragically relevant today ... alongside
this touching personal material, Wasserstein's book vividly traces
how what was once a Polish town became 'a predominantly Jewish one'
by around 1800 and is 'now almost entirely Ukrainian'. ... among
its many other virtues, this book is a sharp reminder of the
dangers of turning history into a simplistic morality tale
*Observer*
The personal thread of his own family's experiences lends warmth
and tragedy to the facts that he meticulously documents. ...
succeed[s] in putting a human face to the suffering of ordinary
people trapped in the turmoil of physical conflict and political
ideologies ... steadfastly refuse[s] to airbrush the past
*Financial Times*
We believe that we think with our minds. But a part of us - a deep
and important part - thinks with the blood. Our sense of self is
deeply entwined with the places we came from and the people who
formed us. ... For the historian Bernard Wasserstein, that origin
story includes the violence, injustice and trauma suffered by his
family at the hands of the Nazis. But A Small Town in Ukraine is
more than just a family biography. It is Wasserstein's attempt not
just to chronicle the suffering experienced by his parents and
grandparents but also to understand it. His method is to examine,
in minute and forensic detail, the history of the place from which
they came, the small town of Krakowiec - 'a little place, you won't
have heard of it', as his father used to say. ... Wasserstein
offers an evocative and detailed portrait of the world that formed
his grandfather's and ancestors' lives. ... his book is a moving
chronicle of a lost world, written with eloquence and emotional
intelligence but without bitterness
*Literary Review*
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