Ninety-eight-year-old Harry Bernstein emigrated to the United States with his family after World War I. He began writing his acclaimed first book, The Invisible Wall, after the death of his wife, Ruby. He has also been published in “My Turn” in Newsweek. Bernstein lives in Brick, New Jersey, where he is working on another book.
“Worthy . . . [follows] Bernstein’s family . . . as they struggle
to find a new life in America in 1922.”—USA Today
“Packed with carefully crafted dialogue and descriptions that
transport us, with keen verisimilitude, from working-class England
to Depression-era Chicago . . . Visceral, honest writing [makes]
Bernstein’s memoir impossible to put down.”—Jewish News Weekly
“[A] wise, unsentimental memoir.”—New York Times
“Beneath the poignant descriptions of places and times past,
beneath the rising and falling patterns of these characters’ lives,
we hear what Wordsworth called ‘the still sad music of humanity.’
”—Washington Post Book World
“Gripping . . . a powerful story of courage, sacrifice,
determination, financial hardship and love.”—Jewish Chronicle
“This little book is a marvel, sparely written by a man with almost
100 years experience.”—Deseret Morning News
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