What They Saved: Pieces from a Jewish Past

When
2 to 3 p.m., Feb. 26, 2012

Miller, professor of English and comparative literature at CUNY's Graduate Center, traces the history of her father Louis's family, to solve the mystery of why, when Louis's older brother, Sam, moved to Arizona in 1934, the two brothers largely lost contact and never met again. Beginning with photographs, scrapbooks, and other mementos and documents, Miller also interviews family members in Memphis, Phoenix, and Israel. She travels twice to Kishinev, in Moldova, scene of an infamous 1903 pogrom, to better understand the world of her paternal grandparents. While Miller never solves the mystery of her father and uncle's separation, she learns fascinating details about her extended paternal family, including the existence of previously unknown relatives, and their reportedly non-Zionist grandmother's purchase of a parcel of land in 1920s Palestine. Miller also has many acute observations about the sometimes enlightening, often frustrating nature of such a quest (e.g., "The lure of the puzzle, the enigma of lineage,... is not so easily resisted"). Miller (Bequest and Betrayal: Memories of a Parent's Death) writes thoughtfully about her efforts to piece together a family's story of dislocation, success, and broken links, and of how, in the process, Miller reconnected with Jewish history and traditions.

Nancy K. Miller is distinguished professor of English and comparative literature at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, most recently But Enough About Me: Why We Read Other People’s Lives and Bequest and Betrayal: Memoirs of a Parent’s Death. Miller will be reading at the local Barnes & Noble on Friday, Feburary 24th, 2012 7:00pm and at Jewish History Museum, (564 S. Stone) this Sunday at 2:00pm.

Sources: Nebraska Press / Google books

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