From Publishers Weekly
Sutin's ingeniously constructed memoir uses duotone reproductions of postcards--by turns nostalgic, quaint or exotic--as Rorschach blots to evoke his deepest memories and feelings. In his previous memoir, Jack and Rochelle, Sutin chronicled the relationship between his father, a hero of the Jewish anti-Nazi resistance in Poland, and his mother, who escaped from a Nazi ghetto into the Polish woods where she hid and fought Germans; both emigrated to America at war's end. As the son of Holocaust survivors, Sutin, who was born in 1951 and grew up in Minneapolis/St. Paul, carried a special burden of grief and pain--and an urgent need to give his life meaning. Here he writes about typical events--Little League, his discovery of sex, bar mitzvah, past loves--but imbues his reminiscences of adolescent insecurity with a rueful, forgiving wisdom. After attending experimental Antioch College in the late '60s and a stint as a starry-eyed aspiring writer in Paris in 1973, maturity came with marriage, fatherhood and stepfatherhood. The postcards, which range from Michelangelo to Hollywood midgets to scenes of Bolivia, Idaho, Bombay and Bethlehem, are a screen on which Sutin projects his recollections, dreams and musings. But here's the catch: none of the people depicted in the postcards, and very few of the settings, are from Sutin's own life. Between each image and the corresponding text, odd juxtapositions and eerie or hilarious disjunctions fly like sparks, amplifying Sutin's memories and puncturing his wild fantasies. The past is what we make of it, he insists in this evocative if elusive postmodernist hall of mirrors. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Taking an unusual approach to memoir writing, Sutin, an award-winning memoirist and biographer, organizes episodes of his life around his antique postcard collection. An avid collector since a postcard of a mosque caught his eye in 1973, he sees the postcards as entries into his unconscious. Each one triggers a memory from Sutin's life, revealing a warm, reflective, and quirky personality. His wide-ranging subjects include such vignettes as a fifth-grade trip to a potato chip factory, visiting his father's place of business, working as a railroad lineman, and trying to quiet his crying infant daughter. These brief reminiscences, playful yet serious, sound realistic sometimes, fantastical at others. In their brevity, they reveal Sutin's considerable skill in capturing an incident or feeling in an enticing way with a witty, poetic sensibility. This book will appeal to those interested in exploring an innovative approach to the memoir. Recommended for public and academic libraries.DNancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo Lib.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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