Showing posts with label family history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family history. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Becoming Acquainted with the People My Parents Were

In her new book, When People Wrote Letters: A Family Chronicle, Shakespeare scholar Martha Rozett talks about "becoming acquainted with the people my parents were before I was born" as she reviews their letters and other memorabilia.

"After my mother's death my father reduced the accumulations of a lifetime-- two lifetimes-- to the contents of a one-bedroom apartment in New York City. It is now six weeks after his death, and I have begun the sifting and sorting process once again...."

Rozett presents her book today at 4:15 p.m. in the Standish Room, Science Library.

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Tuesday, April 3, 2012

An Adventure in Letters-- Martha Rozett

Martha Rozett, a new addition to our schedule, will present When People Wrote Letters, a family history told through letters, photographs, clippings and pamphlets, excerpts from an unpublished autobiography and from a family history narrative, along with other saved objects.

The main characters are Betty and Edith Stedman, two eloquent and adventurous women whose relationship serves as the book’s central narrative. Their travels, and the travels of other family members, take the reader from 19th and early twentieth century New England, to Key West in the 1830s, to the Minnesota Territories in the 1860s, to France during World War I, to small towns in Texas and to China in the 1920s, to Spain in the early 1930s, and across America during World War II.

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Two Soviet Jewish Grandmothers

Katha Pollitt reviews Ester and Ruzya, a dual biography of two Soviet Jewish women and their harrowing stories, told by their granddaughter, Masha Gessen (who visits Thursday) in 2005 in the New York Times:

"Reviewers sometimes call a work of nonfiction ''as exciting as a novel,'' but that would be an understatement applied to this extraordinary family memoir. Masha Gessen, a gifted Russian-American journalist, narrates the intertwined lives of her two Soviet Jewish grandmothers, best friends for over 50 years, as they confront some of the 20th century's worst ordeals: Stalin's terror, Hitler's mass murder of the Jews, World War II, the bewildering twists and turns of the post-Stalin era. If your idea of a memoir runs to family dysfunction and authorial disgruntlement, or to people going on about their houses and travels, ''Ester and Ruzya'' will remind you how much life, history and emotional and moral complexity the genre can convey in the hands of a wonderful writer. " More.

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