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Art of a Jewish Woman: The True Story of How a Penniless Holocaust Escapee Became an Influential Modern Art Connoisseur (formerly titled Felice's Worlds) (English Edition) Formato Kindle
First she escaped the Holocaust and the poverty of the shtetl. After that, she moved in many worlds. And in every one she made her mark.
"Henry Massie never blinks as he creates an astonishing chronicle of a life in diaspora. Only a son could capture this passionate spirit, who escaped both Adolf Hitler and Joe McCarthy." -Patty Friedmann, author of Too Jewish
Art of a Jewish Woman is a memoir and biography of Massie's mother, a brilliant and beautiful woman who escaped the Holocaust and participated in many of the most critical periods of the 20th Century. One part historical biography, weaving World War II era European cultural relationships with the history of Modern Art, and one part inspirational romance, it paints a vivid portrait of Felice as an indomitable spirit, her boldness and resilience a beacon of hope.
"The most clear expose on the Holocaust and European history that I've read outside of text books ... A mesmerizing, rare and unforgettable read." -A Bookish Libraria
"A biography that chronicles an amazing life ... Vivid rather than stuffy." -A Universe in Words
From the author:
I had listened to my mother’s tales all my life and wanted to share them. She was an escapee from a Polish shtetl wiped out by the Nazis, a high-school political activist in Lithuania, a university student in France who lost her first love tragically, a partisan for Arab-Jewish co-existence in Palestine who was caught in the first intifada in 1936, and a penniless arrival to America in 1937.
Yet when she died she had amassed one of the most important collections of Modern Art in the world and was a university lecturer on the subject.
When she was lecturing on modern art at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, young women flocked to her. She advised them on their love-life and mentored them in their education. She never spoke of the Feminist movement, however one of her college students said height of feminism in the 1970s, "She was the quintessential modern woman. That short hair [like Audrey Hepburn's], those clothes [colorful folkloric during the day, black skirt to the knee with a black top in the evening], that lovely petite body with the big brown eyes. She was alive, forceful, independent and challenging."
In writing about her, I understood for the first time how her experience of losing loved ones to the Nazis had been passed on to her American son.
But as a psychiatrist, I was drawn to Felice’s story because it shows so much resilience in the face of terrible emotional trauma. Her life dramatizes how just keeping on through days of having nothing but a belief that "someday I will have something," can be a powerful survival tool.
Excerpt:
Inside the stone building, a British officer examined passenger's travel documents. When Felice's turn came, the crisply uniformed colonel looked at her bare shoulders and her short beige and cream linen dress. A marriage certificate issued the day before by a rabbi in Beirut said they were husband and wife. The man looked malnourished. He had a red beard and long ear-locks, and large spectacles covered his face. His black suit was all dusty, and his head was covered with a large Hassidic black fedora. The couple did not speak to each other. The colonel was under orders to do his part at the border to stop the flow of illegal immigrants into Palestine. He asked Felice first in English, which she didn't know, then in French, "Are the two of you married?"
"Yes, of course," she answered him.
"What language do you have in common?" he continued, probing the ruse.
But Felice and her newly certificated husband had no language in common. He spoke Arabic and Hebrew, and she Polish, French, German, Yiddish, and some Russian. "The Language of love," she said in perfect melodious French, not missing a beat, flirting with the colonel.
He stamped her entry visa.
- LinguaInglese
- Data di pubblicazione19 novembre 2013
- Dimensioni file1010 KB
Dettagli prodotto
- ASIN : B0079Q0HU6
- Editore : booksBnimble (19 novembre 2013)
- Lingua : Inglese
- Dimensioni file : 1010 KB
- Utilizzo simultaneo di dispositivi : illimitato
- Da testo a voce : Abilitato
- Screen Reader : Supportato
- Miglioramenti tipografici : Abilitato
- X-Ray : Abilitato
- Word Wise : Abilitato
- Memo : Su Kindle Scribe
- Lunghezza stampa : 220 pagine
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By Henry Messie
This loving tribute to an astounding sounding woman is penned by her son. Felice was born to the name Oserovicz, married the name Steinberg to get into Palestine, and then finally married Edward Massie for love, she was more than her last names, and her left spanned the globe as well. A woman of her time, maybe a bit ahead of her time of some things, a woman that escaped the horrors that befell her family and the rest of Europe, and suffered for it for the rest of her life.
This is a tapestry of woman's life well lived, with many interesting backdrops to set the various stage and the cast of characters is wide and full of verity. Not a dull life did this woman live, a woman whose belief in Socialism was set at a very young age and carried her through the years she lived, the people she knew and the countries she lived in. She even managed to hang on it as a very vocal person in the McCarthy era. The colors and textures of this novel pull you along as you read from one page to the next, eager to find out what next befalls our lovely heroine. Totally captivating life, and finally understood by her son after a lifetime of chasing after the larger than life image that was her.
This book spans the globe, and almost a hundred years worth of history. Each time Felice made a move she moved forward, and she just missed the violence WWII that swept through Europe. But she was not unaffected by the war, though she was not there, her family was still over there, then the war in Palestine where her sisters had made their home. But she survived, and she lived a good long life, into her nineties. A must read if you like epic personal stories. I couldn't put this book down, too many times it sent me searching the internet after a term or an event in history, and I love books that can so catch my attention. Five Stars for this one, hands down a great book.

The story gives a side to the Holocaust that isn't well noted. We typically think of the ones who struggled through it and not so much about the ones who escaped by the skin of their teeth. I believe many from that era did all they could to suppress the memories and very few told their tales. This is history that needs to be told (with discretion) to the young. If it is not told it will be repeated. God forbid that our children or grandchildren become victims or (worse yet) the abusers.

This book is well worth reading but the author and publishers really should change the title, it does the book no favours at all.
