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For review copies and
interviews with editor Cara De Silva,
contact Matthew Smiley at
MSmiley@rowman.com
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - JUST
RELEASED IN PAPERBACK
IN MEMORY'S KITCHEN:
A LEGACY FROM THE WOMEN OF TEREZIN
Edited by Cara De Silva, Translated by Bianca Steiner Brown
Foreword by Michael Berenbaum
(Summer
2006) IN MEMORY'S KITCHEN: A LEGACY FROM THE WOMEN OF
TEREZIN, first published in hardcover in 1996, introduced
an unknown genre of Holocaust literature to the world. A
collective memoir in the form of a cookbook, it contains
recipes that while destined neither for stove or table,
poignantly demonstrate the power of food to sustain not just
the body, but the spirit. To keep IN MEMORY'S KITCHEN
and its authors in the public mind and heart, a tenth
anniversary paperback edition published by Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, Inc. has just been released making
this historical treasure even more accessible to readers
everywhere.
The
steam from the tea kettle was just beginning to cloud the
windows when the phone rang that extraordinary afternoon. "Is
this Anny Stern?" asked the unfamiliar voice… “Then I have a
package for you from your mother." The words were few, but
with them a twenty-five year journey from the Czechoslovakian
ghetto/concentration camp of Terezín to a Manhattan high rise
had come to an end. And another remarkable journey had begun.
Inside the
package lay a frail hand-sewn manuscript that, published as
IN MEMORY’S KITCHEN, would ultimately become one of The
New York Times most noteworthy books of the year, and a
small phenomenon in media across the globe. Its brittle
pages, covered with a variety of faltering scripts, recalled
life before Terezín (known, too, as Theresiendstadt) in a most
unusual fashion. Set down by malnourished and starving women,
this "memoir," a largely unknown genre of Holocaust
literature, was a compilation of traditional dishes, of
"dream" recipes, a cookbook not for cooking, but for
remembering a time when the authors had children and husbands
to feed, and reasons to feast and celebrate. This original
manuscript is preserved in the Holocaust Museum in Washington,
D.C.
That many of
these haunting recipes don't work because of the state of
starvation, the women were in, and the effect on their
faculties, means the mistakes bear witness. That additional
examples of the genre have been found, some from within the
Holocaust, others written by soldiers, including GIs in a
prisoner of war camp, makes the book all the more important.
And could anything demonstrate better the power of food as an
identity marker, and its use as a potent form of psychological
resistance, a way to draw strength, and to reinforce who you
are, while your culture is under siege and in danger of being
obliterated?
Carrying on
the traditions of its authors as they themselves could not,
IN MEMORY’S KITCHEN preserves their legacy for us all.
The book, which has shown out-of-the-ordinary staying power
and might, and is filled with both historical and contemporary
relevance, has already left an indelible mark. And yet still
today the story continues…
IN
MEMORY'S KITCHEN: A LEGACY FROM THE WOMEN OF TEREZIN
includes an introduction by editor, writer, and food historian
Cara De Silva; a foreword by noted Holocaust scholar, Michael
Berenbaum, and translation by Bianca Steiner Brown, herself a
former inmate of Terezín.
About the Editor
Cara
De Silva is an award-winning journalist, whose
writings have appeared in
Newsday, The
New York Times,
The Washington Post,
The Los Angeles Times
Syndicate, The
New York Daily News,
Gourmet,
Food & Wine, Eating Well,
Martha Stewart Living,
Cuisine, and
Diversion. In
addition, she has been featured on local, national, and
international television and radio shows, including
The News Hour with Jim Lehrer
(PBS), The Morning Show
(CNN), All Things
Considered (NPR), and
The Voice of America.
She lives in New York, NY.
For review copies and interviews
with editor Cara De Silva, contact Matthew Smiley at
MSmiley@rowman.com
IN MEMORY'S KITCHEN: A LEGACY FROM THE WOMEN OF TEREZIN
Edited by Cara De Silva, Translated by Bianca Steiner Brown,
Foreword by Michael Berenbaum;
$14.95
Paper; ISBN 0-7425-4646-2; Rowman & Littlefield Publishers,
Inc.; May 2006; 160pp.
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