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They Were Good Germans Once: A Memoir

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"A thoughtful, notable addition to the literature of the Holocaust . . . a poignant memoir."—Kirkus ReviewsIn They Were Good Germans Once, author and biographer Evelyn Toynton speaks to a universal...
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  • 14 May 2024
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"A thoughtful, notable addition to the literature of the Holocaust . . . a poignant memoir."—Kirkus Reviews

In They Were Good Germans Once, author and biographer Evelyn Toynton speaks to a universal immigrant family experience — some embrace a new life, some forge a compromise between their new home and old traditions, while others never fully find their way.

Through her series of essays, Toynton remembers her own émigré relatives, some of whom left Germany as soon as Hitler came to power, others only escaping much later.

Her family lost not only their native homeland and their sense of identity but many of the people they loved. Yet each found ways to give meaning to their lives, whether in their own small circles or in the world at large.
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Price: $12.99
Publisher: Delphinium Books
Imprint: Delphinium Books
Publication Date: 14 May 2024
ISBN: 9781504096034
Format: eBook
BISACs: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Jewish, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Memoirs, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical
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"The author's tone is often elegiac . . . A thoughtful, notable addition to the literature of the Holocaust and those survivors who started anew in America . . . a poignant memoir." — Kirkus Reviews

"This priceless recapturing of darkened history, this lifetime's rumination on family results in a stunningly intelligent and elegantly written work, whose honesty, maturity, perspective, and wisdom are so rare in today's memoirs. I found it utterly engrossing." —Phillip Lopate, author of To Show and to Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction
"Poignant . . . a fascinating memoir."— The Jewish Journal

"This book enchanted me in every way. With Toynton's signature intelligence, subtlety and wit, she describes members of her family — deracinated through no fault of their own — in portraits that are by turns surprising, hilarious and heartbreaking. They speak to the punishment of expulsion, the longing for what was left behind, the finality of exile. I shall reread this book at least once a year to remind myself of what a good memoir can be." Lynn Freed, author of The Romance of Elsewhere

"Evelyn Toynton's German Jewish family was one of the lucky ones, who escaped the Holocaust and made it to America. But her tragic, comic, sharply observed memoir shines a brilliant light on their fate, 'marooned for life', as she writes of her uncle, in a strange loneliness. — Carole Angier, author of Speak, Silence: In Search of W.G. Sebald