David Laskin is the author of the new book The Family: Three Journeys into the Heart of the Twentieth Century, on sale Oct. 15. It focuses on his own family's experiences in the United States, Europe, and Israel. His other books include The Children's Blizzard, The Long Way Home, and Partisans. He lives in the Seattle area.
Q: Why did you decide to write
your family’s story, and to focus on the three parts of the family?
A: Growing up, I knew about Aunt
Itel and the Maidenform bra company, and my grandfather’s business. The
American part of the story was known to me.
I kind of vaguely knew about the
relatives in Israel, but I didn’t know a lot about their story.
I had no idea
about the Holocaust story and that 17 relatives were killed in the Shoah was
never talked about. I don’t think my mother knew that much about it. It was not
part of my consciousness growing up.
I [erroneously] got the idea that we were related to
[Stalinist figure] Lazar Kaganovich, and I thought I would look at capitalism
and communism, and the evil henchman and the bra tycoon. I contacted the
Israelis, and they filled me in on the truth about the family.
I had a eureka
moment when I realized that I had the three major strands of [recent] Jewish
history on my family tree. You see writers in movies madly typing away—that’s
not the way I work; it’s very boring, I squeeze out a few words. This was one
of the few times in my life when it was like the movies.
Q: What has been the reaction of
family members to the book?
A: So far so good. My mother read
it in galleys and loved it, of course!...
I haven’t gotten any blowback. There
have been a couple of, “I don’t remember it this way”s. The part I was the most
worried about was one paragraph about Rose during World War II, and Shalom Tvi
behaving inappropriately; she told me this when I interviewed her. I wondered,
How is Rose going to feel; how are Shalom Tvi’s grandchildren going to feel. So
far nobody has said anything.
My cousin Benny, to whom the book is
dedicated—his wife sent me a photo of him holding the book and looking
delighted. The Israelis were very close to the family that was killed in the
Shoah. They were really on board with this.
Israel has come in for its share of
criticism, and many Israelis feel wounded by this. This book looks back to the
old days of idealistic Zionists. [I hope] this book will make them proud. I
have problems with the current Israeli regime, but I love Israel.
Q: You said you were familiar with
much of your American family’s story, but was there anything new to you as you
researched the book?
A: I found a lot of wonderful
relatives! When you start poking around in the family tree, a lot of people
turn [up]. They’re great people, and I feel like I’ve really extended my family,
and brought together relatives who had not been close.
I didn’t realize the
family had started on the Lower East Side; their tenement is still there. I
didn’t realize they had been so humble. When Shalom Tvi came over [to the
United States in 1939], I didn’t realize that he was living upstairs from my
mother, living on a pullout sofabed for 7 ½ years. I didn’t really put the
pieces together. Their point of view toward him was fond, they felt sorry for
him, but they had no idea what was going on in his mind.
I didn’t know we were
affiliated with Volozhin, the great yeshiva town, and that the scribal
tradition was so important and passed on to my grandfather. There was a lot
about Maidenform—I didn’t really know about the 1920s story.
Q: Did the fact that you were
writing about your own family make it easier or more difficult to write this book,
compared to your previous books?
A: It was easier in some ways and
harder in some ways. I write nonfiction, but it’s creative nonfiction. I put
myself in the place of a historic person. In The Children’s Blizzard, I
describe what’s going on through a teacher’s mind, a father’s mind. I always
say in the footnotes that it’s based on a diary [or other material], but
there’s some imaginative recreation. When it’s a family member, I share a lot
of DNA with these people. I feel it’s a little easier for me to imagine what
they went through.
The harder part is feeling a
little more worried about invading the privacy of people I’m close to and care
about. …I often wondered about writers who write intimate stuff about their sex
life, coming out, having a sex-change operation—how their parents, or their
children would react. I’m very shy and private—this book has nothing racy, but
has a lot of intimate stuff.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: Promoting the book! I’m not
doing much else. I have a New York Times piece in the works about Tuscany, and
a piece about researching family history for Parade. … I’m looking around for
the next big thing.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I think any book that touches
on the Holocaust is slotted as a Holocaust book….What’s unique about this book
is that it’s a Holocaust book that’s also about American success and triumph,
and about the founding of a country.
Also, the book was named one of
Amazon’s best books of the month.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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