Bobish by Magdelena Ball, a New Verse Memoir
Author Website: http://www.magdalenaball.com
Publisher: Puncher & Wattmann (November 7, 2022)
Publisher: P.O. Box 279, Waratah NSW 2298 (Australia)
Publisher Website Address: https://puncherandwattmann.com/
Price $16.99 Paperback
Page count: 154 Pages
Formats: Paperback
ISBN: 1922571601
ISBN-13: 978-1922571601
Available on Amazon
Carolyn Wilhelm, reviewer
Though she was only fourteen years old, like many other Jews in Eastern Europe’s Pale of Settlement in 1907, Rebecca Lieberman gathered her few belongings and left for the United States. Alone. What follows is a unique and poetic story of history, war, mysticism, music, abuse, survival and transcendence against the back drop of New York City in the 20s, 30s, and 40s.
I am just taken with this book! Ball's poetry gives the immigration story a fresh new perspective (just when you think you have maybe read it all). Beautifully written, the words transcend the actual events and readers will even be reminded of their own family stories. How did Ball manage to recreate her great-grandmother's life into such a fantastic read? I do not know, but I am glad she did. Breathtaking! This will tug at my heart a long time. Do not miss this book!
Reviews may be found on Amazon, Goodreads, other online sites, and below.
'A fourteen-year-old girl is launched by
pogroms and poverty into the New World, fearful and alone. How can she
know that her great-granddaughter would weave her story, through
imagination and a careful reading of history, into a poetic gift to her
memory, and for many more generations to come?'
~ Ramona Koval
'Magdalena Ball’s powerful re-imagining of her
great-grandmother’s life, from crossing the ocean in steerage, alone, at the
age of fourteen, to the hardships of immigrant life in New York, is a vivid, lyrical portrayal of a woman that is as
much an act of love as it is the preservation of a life, with its lessons of
quiet courage in the face of crushing despair.' ~ Charles
Rammelkamp
'The importance of remembering is a cornerstone of the Jewish faith and in this account of the author’s Jewish great-grandmother as she navigates her life of exile, each scene is both clear eyed and evocative, poetic and down to earth, empathetic and far reaching. A marvellous, nourishing book of resilience.' ~Judy Johnson
Labels: 1907, Bobish, immigrant, Jewish, Pale of Settlement, Poet Magdalena Ball, poetry, survival, transcendence, verse memoir
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