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Erika Dreifus

Autor von Quiet Americans

2 Werke 42 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Werke von Erika Dreifus

Quiet Americans (2011) 35 Exemplare
Birthright (2019) 7 Exemplare

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Birthright: Poems
By Erika Dreifus
2021
Reviewed by Angie Mangino
Rating: 5 stars

How do those who came before us affect our own lives? What do we inherit? What do we become from choices made with what to incorporate into our own lives? How does our spirituality, reading, and life experiences make us who we are?

Readers will find themselves relating to their own legacy reading these poems that so beautifully share the author’s life. The strongest pull of this collection is in both its variety and in its seamless flow.

Family history and connection brings one to share in the author’s birthright, making readers reflect on their own family ancestors in the process.

Biblical references make religious life come alive when seen in the totality of one’s life.

Literary references make readers see known works in a new light, connecting the written word to life experiences.

The author’s life in New York shows through with all the clarity and distinct voice of a New Yorker.

“Through the lens of one person’s experience of inheritance, the poems suggest ways in which all of us may be influenced in how we perceive and process our lives and times.”

This reviewer found these poems memorable with the skillful writing, keenly placed order, and rich open sharing of feelings to which we all can relate.
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Angie Mangino currently works as a freelance journalist, author, and book reviewer, additionally offering authors personalized critique service and copyediting of unpublished manuscripts. www.AngieMangino.com
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AngieMangino | Feb 12, 2021 |
This collection of short stories explores the experiences of German Jews before, during, and after the Holocaust. The settings range from a small German village on the edge of the Black Forest in 1888, to a prisoner-of-war camp in rural Illinois in 1944, to Munich in 2004. Dreifus subtly reminds us of the historical and cultural context – in lightning-flash images of Kristallnacht, or the appearance of a minor character of startling historical importance, or the surprising appearance of Black September in a story about something else. What I loved most about Quiet Americans is its bigheartedness. These stories are understated and full of surprises; they are about generosity and forgiveness as well as atrocity, about kindness as well as survival.… (mehr)
 
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EllenMeeropol | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 7, 2013 |
Some of the stories in Quiet Americans are connected and interrelated, but not all of them. Each individual story brings an in depth look into the minds and emotions of those who have struggled with the after-effects and after-affects of the Shoah/Holocaust, and those who have struggled with identity. Thought-provoking is an understatement in describing Quiet Americans. Each story is sensitively written, but filled with a quiet strength. Erika Dreifus has written an insightful and strong book, and shows the reader how emotions have a distinct and definite influence on the way we choose, or not choose, to remember the past in order to survive the traumas inflicted on us. Her word paintings are vivid, her prose beautiful, and filled with the resounding force of memory, its suppression of events, and its remembrance of times past.

Yet, within the strong imagery, lies a resonance of dignity, sparks of hope, and inspiring stories, that I highly recommend.
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LorriMilli | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 21, 2010 |

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Werke
2
Mitglieder
42
Beliebtheit
#357,757
Bewertung
½ 4.3
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
3
Favoriten
1