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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
caustic "Kid" illuminates 2G anguish over Holocaust identity,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Holocaust Kid (Paperback)
Sonia Pilcer's important, provocative and caustic "The Holocaust Kid" defies easy categorization. This novel is at once a profound contemplation of the Holocaust, a wickedly twisted view of the responsibilities and burdens of being a child of Holocaust survivors and a withering examination of the American Jewish sanctification of Holocaust memory and its attendant mandate of remembrance. Told through the beleaguered, angry and sarcastic voice of Zosha Palovsky, "The Holocaust Kid" provides important insights into the lives of children of survivors, the 2G generation. Zosha's emotional turmoil, her anger at being held hostage to a defining event she never experiences directly, but only derivatively, and her unflinching insistence on carving out her own identity give the novel its purchase.The Holocaust looms as the defining nature of Zosha's life. Her mother, the omnipresent and maddeningly oppressive Genia, and her father, laconic and intellectually inquisitive Heniek, provide their daughter with the foundation of Holocaust identity, which so informs Zosha's sensibility. Forever aware of her responsibility as a replacement for so much that was lost, she laments relinquishing her own needs and wants. She is warned that she "must never forget, not even for a moment. Because I lived when so many died." Yet, what is she to remember? Furtively cleaning her daughter's room, Genia discovers one of Zosha's essays. Zosha examines the Hebrew injunction to remember, zachor. Yet her daughter is confused as to what she is mandated to sanctify. "Remember what? Lives exitnguished?...Childhoods, entire countries and cultures lost?" Zosha recoils at the unfairness of this obligation and the impossible enormity of its requirements. Her father has "numbers," her mother "nightmares;" Zosha is left with their "fierce, anxious love." "Kid" scrapes against our preconceptions of being a child of survivors. When Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel proclaims that their is a "privileged generation," that 2G children are the "justification" of their parents' will to survive the unspeakable, Pilcer bitterly questions those assumptions. If Zosha's life is so presumably sanctified by memory, why does remembrance bring discomfort and not peace? The daughter angrily denounces her parents' captivity by memory, their stubborn refusal to let loose and recreate a genuine new life in America. Her parents memories served only to increase pain. Their "tearful retelling of loss" reinforced their captivity to genocide. Zosha bristles with anger at her parents' double standards, their inconsistencies, phony rituals and use of Judaism as a sword raised to compel obedience. Even the Holocaust becomes but the ultimate parental means to subordinate Zosha. Rejecting their wish that she become "normal, like Daddy and me," Zosha sets sail to discover her own identity. Though competently chronicled, this quest loses its tautness due to the structure of the novel. "Kid" seems to be composed of disparate narrative episodes, and, indeed, many of the chapters have appeared in numerous journals during the past decade. Though not every novel needs to appear seamless, "Kid" suffers from abrupt, disjointed changes in time. This sole structural criticsm, however, should not dissuade readers from tackling this morbidly fascinating, intellectually provocative and psychologically revealing short novel. "The Holocaust Kid" succeeds on levels which few authors have even attempted to explore. It is an audacious, explosive and, in places, outrageous examination of the impact of the Holocaust on survivors and their children. Its voice is new, fresh and memorable.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A riveting portrayal of the Second Generation experience,
By Sharon Leib (NJ, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Holocaust Kid: Stories (Hardcover)
In The Holocaust Kid, Sonia Pilcer movingly depicts the story of Zosha Palovsky, a child of Holocaust survivors, from the beginning of her life in a German DP (displaced persons) camp, throughout her childhood, turbulent adolescence, and finally, into adulthood. The book is a collection of stories, each one dealing with a different period in Zosha's life, or the lives of her survivor parents.The stories dealing with her parents' experiences in the camps provide the context and background for the atmosphere in which Zosha was raised. As a member of the Second Generation myself, the book has a great deal of meaning for me. However, many of the issues in this book are universal (parent-child relationships, rebellion, etc) and I highly recommmend it to anyone looking for a fascinating read, regardless of their background or experience.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Simply Not That Great,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Holocaust Kid: Stories (Hardcover)
I read other people's reviews for this book and thought I would find it very interesting and engaging. I have read a wide variety of other books either about the Holocaust or at least touch upon the subject, and this one just isn't very good. I didn't like any of the characters and only some of the stories have any potential to make me smile, laugh or think very deeply. This is one of those books that is short, so it's easy to read, but the only reason I couldn't put it down is because I was painfully hoping that at some point, it would get better. I read a lot of books and while this one is okay, overall, I would recommend to skip it.
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