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Once There Was a Town: The Memory Books of a Lost Jewish World

Once There Was a Town: The Memory Books of a Lost Jewish World

by Jane Ziegelman

St. Martin's Press ·2026 ·240 pages ·History
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I Index
72/99
Near the Top

65/99

Critics

Top of the Pile

78/99

Readers

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Scholars

96/99

Rating

34/99

Volume

82/99

Rating

73/99

Volume

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About This Book

A powerful exploration of the books created by Jewish Holocaust survivors to honor their lost worldBy the close of World War II, six million Jews had been erased from the face of the earth. Those who eluded death had lost their homes, families, and entire way of life. Their response was quintessentially Jewish. From a people with a long-history of self-narration, survivors gathered in groups and wrote books, yizkor books, remembering all that had been destroyed. Jane Ziegelman's Once There Was a Town takes readers on a journey through this largely uncharted body of writing and the vanished world it depicts. Once There Was a Town resounds with the voices of rich and poor, shopkeepers and tradespeople, scholars and peddlers, Zionists and Communists, men and women telling stories of the towns that were their homes. Stops are made in the bustling market squares where Jewish merchants catered to local farmers; study houses where men recited Torah; kitchens where homemakers baked 20-pound loaves of bread; cemeteries where mourners conversed with departed loved ones and wooded groves where young couples met for the occasional moonlit tryst. Of the many towns on Ziegelman's itinerary, she always circles back to Luboml, her family's ancestral shtetl and the point of departure for her own journey of discovery.In conversation with classics by IB Singer and Roman Vishniac, Once There Was a Town is a landmark of rediscovery, and a love song to a vanished world.


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Reviews

"Ziegelman chronicles the journeys of those family members who found their way to the U.S., as well as the fates of those who remained."

Diane Cole· The Wall Street Journal Top of the Pile

"A beautiful tribute to the people lost and the memory books created to preserve their memories."

Barbara M. Bibel· Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"A moving collection of reminiscences of European Jewish life before the Holocaust."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"It's an immersive, dreamlike window into a tragically lost world"

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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