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"Shore's Europe is populated with prostitutes and pimps, street urchins
and skinheads; the landscape is "cold and gray... burnt to ashes and
rebuilt in Stalinist architecture." The National Jewish Book Award
winner's newest (after Caviar and Ashes: A Warsaw Generation's Life and
Death in Marxism, 1918 1968) begins and ends with the suicide of a
friend, an emigre who returned to Prague only to find that the city he
remembered no longer exists, and many of the characters who fill its
pages are ghosts refugees of time and ideology, unable to make peace
with the capitalist theme park that replaced their homelands. A
historian of the Holocaust and of communism, Shore journeys through
Eastern Europe probing the wounds left by the twin disasters of the 20th
century. A mix of memoir, travelogue, and philosophical treatise, her
book is above all an anthropological study of a people living in a world
obscured by cobwebs, more mindful of yesterday than today, where the
future cannot be realized until the deaths of all those who witnessed
the abyss. The one who makes such observations can only be an outsider,
or in the words of one of Shore's interlocutors one who knows "too much
and not enough, and nothing." Challenging and sometimes maddening, but
also warm and compassionate, the resulting work is an examination of
what it means to live in a society where "the realm of the not possible
expansive" and where history, "proceeding inexorably and inevitably, "
shapes identity." (Publisher's Weekly)
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