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Looking for Strangers: The True Story of My Hidden Wartime Childhood
Contributor(s): Katz, Dori (Author)
ISBN: 022605862X     ISBN-13: 9780226058627
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
OUR PRICE:   $23.76  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: September 2013
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
- History | Western Europe - General
- History | Military - World War Ii
Dewey: B
LCCN: 2013003400
Physical Information: 0.8" H x 5.7" W x 8.6" (0.80 lbs) 184 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Western Europe
- Chronological Period - 1940's
- Religious Orientation - Jewish
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Dori Katz is a Jewish Holocaust survivor who thought that her lost memories of her childhood years in Belgium were irrecoverable. But after a chance viewing of a documentary about hidden children in German-occupied Belgium, she realized that she might, in fact, be able to unearth those years. Looking for Strangers is the deeply honest record of her attempt to do so, a detective story that unfolds through one of the most horrifying periods in history in an attempt to understand one's place within it.

In alternating chapters, Katz journeys into multiple pasts, setting details from her mother's stories that have captivated her throughout her life alongside an account of her own return to Belgium forty years later--against her mother's urgings--in search of greater clarity. She reconnects her sharp but fragmented memories: being sent by her mother in 1943, at the age of three, to live with a Catholic family under a Christian identity; then being given up, inexplicably, to an orphanage in the years immediately following the war. Only after that, amid postwar confusion, was she able to reconnect with her mother. Following this trail through Belgium to her past places of hiding, Katz eventually finds herself in San Francisco, speaking with a man who claimed to have known her father in Auschwitz--and thus known his end. Weighing many other stories from the people she meets along her way--all of whom seem to hold something back--she attempts to stitch thread after thread into a unified truth, to understand the countless motivations and circumstances that determined her remarkable life.

A story at once about self-discovery, the transformation of memory, a fraught mother-daughter relationship, and the oppression of millions, Looking for Strangers is a book of both historical insight and imaginative grasp. It is a book in which the past, through its very mystery, becomes alive, immediate--of the most urgent importance.


Contributor Bio(s): Katz, Dori: - Dori Katz is professor emeritus of modern languages and literature at Trinity College, Hartford, CT. She is a translator of several books from the French and a poet. Her most recent collection of poems is Hiding in Other People's Houses.