Odessa, Odessa: A Novel
Odessa, Odessa: A Novel book cover

Odessa, Odessa: A Novel

Kindle Edition

Price
$9.49
Publisher
She Writes Press
Publication Date

Description

The vivid events and rich details of the intricate story are compelling and important--immigrants like the Kolopskys helped make America into the land readers recognize today (Israel, too). Readers should understand more of their world at the end of this engrossing novel than they did when they began it . . .A complex but rewarding epic of family ties, fading memories, and immigrants who--through hard work and luck--better the lives of their progeny. -- Kirkus Reviews "Grounded in meticulous reconstruction of time and place and rich with memorable characters--a story with an evocative echo of biblical sibling rivalry--we enjoy decades of an immigrant family and a revelation when American sisters travel to Israel to meet a distant cousin and share histories that propelled their long-estranged kinfolk through time and tumult." ―Belle Elving, Writer, Development at National Public Radio "Artson's mastery over the details and nuances of the lives she creates, and her sense of the history that surrounds them, show her to be a writer of depth and sensitivity." --Melanie Sperling, Professor Emerita, University of California, Riverside " Odessa, Odessa is a vivid immigrant journey of tragedy and triumphs that keeps us engaged until the unexpected and tearful, but optimistic and poignant, ending." --Dr. Linda Tucker, best-selling author of At a Crossroads: Finding the Right Psychotherapist and host of the podcast Challenge Your Thinking "As Artson lovingly shakes the family tree, easily-relatable relatives fall out that readers will fall in love with. A visual writer, she creates scenes worthy of a movie adaptation." --Ruthe Stein, San Francisco Chronicle Senior Movie Correspondent "This story of family exodus into the wider world illuminates both the cultural and political freedoms and constraints that shape and re-shape the quiet dignity of ordinary and striving lives." --Sandra Butler, co-author of It Never Ends: Mothering Middle-Aged Daughters Barbara Artson's novel speaks to the human spirit, and to its resilience and courage under oppression....A story from 100 years ago, Odessa, Odessa is a haunting reminder of the struggles endured by refugees--even in the twenty-first century. --Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of Tikkun, chair of the Network of Spiritual Progressive, and author of Revolutionary This far-reaching novel of epic proportions chronicles three generations of a Jewish family: from the shtetl near Odessa in Western Russia, to an immigrant community in New York, and finally on a journey to Israel in 1996 to meet long-lost cousins and solve an enduring family mystery. Artson vividly evokes the immigrant experience of coming through Ellis island and trying to create a new life in the United States in the early years of the 20th century. A poignant story, full of unforgettable characters and rich historical details. --Barbara Ridley, author of When It's Over "This passionately and artfully told tale reminds us of the courage of people who leave their past, their families, their culture and their lives behind for the hope and promise of a new world, the America that was, and remains, a beacon of freedom, opportunity and hope to dreamers world-wide." --Frederick R. Levick, CEO, Ramah Darom --This text refers to the paperback edition. "The vivid events and rich details of the intricate story are compelling and important―immigrants like the Kolopskys helped make America into the land readers recognize today (Israel, too). Readers should understand more of their world at the end of this engrossing novel than they did when they began it . . .A complex but rewarding epic of family ties, fading memories, and immigrants who―through hard work and luck―better the lives of their progeny." ― Kirkus Reviews “Grounded in meticulous reconstruction of time and place and rich with memorable characters―a story with an evocative echo of biblical sibling rivalry―we enjoy decades of an immigrant family and a revelation when American sisters travel to Israel to meet a distant cousin and share histories that propelled their long-estranged kinfolk through time and tumult.” ―Belle Elving, Writer, Development at National Public Radio “Artson’s mastery over the details and nuances of the lives she creates, and her sense of the history that surrounds them, show her to be a writer of depth and sensitivity.” ―Melanie Sperling, Professor Emerita, University of California, Riverside “ Odessa, Odessa is a vivid immigrant journey of tragedy and triumphs that keeps us engaged until the unexpected and tearful, but optimistic and poignant, ending.” ―Dr. Linda Tucker, best-selling author of At a Crossroads: Finding the Right Psychotherapist and host of the podcast Challenge Your Thinking “As Artson lovingly shakes the family tree, easily-relatable relatives fall out that readers will fall in love with. A visual writer, she creates scenes worthy of a movie adaptation.” ―Ruthe Stein, San Francisco Chronicle Senior Movie Correspondent “This story of family exodus into the wider world illuminates both the cultural and political freedoms and constraints that shape and re-shape the quiet dignity of ordinary and striving lives.” ―Sandra Butler, co-author of It Never Ends: Mothering Middle-Aged Daughters "Barbara Artson's novel speaks to the human spirit, and to its resilience and courage under oppression....A story from 100 years ago, Odessa, Odessa is a haunting reminder of the struggles endured by refugees--even in the twenty-first century." ―Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of Tikkun, chair of the Network of Spiritual Progressive, and author of Revolutionary "This far-reaching novel of epic proportions chronicles three generations of a Jewish family: from the shtetl near Odessa in Western Russia, to an immigrant community in New York, and finally on a journey to Israel in 1996 to meet long-lost cousins and solve an enduring family mystery. Artson vividly evokes the immigrant experience of coming through Ellis island and trying to create a new life in the United States in the early years of the 20th century. A poignant story, full of unforgettable characters and rich historical details." ―Barbara Ridley, author of When It’s Over “This passionately and artfully told tale reminds us of the courage of people who leave their past, their families, their culture and their lives behind for the hope and promise of a new world, the America that was, and remains, a beacon of freedom, opportunity and hope to dreamers world-wide.” ―Frederick R. Levick, CEO, Ramah Darom --This text refers to the paperback edition. Barbara Artson is a retired psychoanalyst who calls San Francisco her home. She regularly contributes essays and reviews of films and books to professional journals. In addition to a PhD in psychology, she holds BA and MA degrees in English literature, and taught Shakespeare as a graduate student while also completing the unfinished Dickens novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood , years before the musical production on Broadway. Like Dora in Odessa, Odessa , Artsons mother stitched elastic to the waistbands of womens bloomers. --This text refers to the audioCD edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Odessa, Odessa
  • follows the families of two sons from a proud lineage of rabbis and cantors in a shtetl near Odessa in western Russia.It begins as Henya, wife of Rabbi Mendel Kolopsky, considers an unexpected pregnancy and the hardships ahead for the children she already has. Soon after the child is born, Cossacks ransack the Kolopskys’ home, severely beating Mendel. In the aftermath, he tells Henya that, contrary to his brother Shimshon’s belief that socialism is their ticket to escaping the region’s brutal anti-Semitic pogroms, he still believes America holds the answer. Henya, meanwhile, understands that any future will be perilous: she now knows their baby daughter, who has slept through this night of melee, is surely deaf. So begins a beautifully told story that unfolds over decades of the 20th century—a story in which two families, joined in tradition and parted during persecution, will remain bound by their fateful decision to leave Odessa.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(105)
★★★★
25%
(87)
★★★
15%
(52)
★★
7%
(24)
23%
(81)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

The story opens in the late 1800's in Russia in the Pel area were Jews mostly lived because they were unwelcome most everywhere in Russia. The Kopolovitz family , Mendel and Henya

and their five children are the main characters of this story that describes acts of Semitism by the Russian government. It made me wonder about my own father's family who lived in Lithuania about the same time as this story takes place. My father came to America , Ellis Island aroiund 1911. The Kopolovitz family came to America, Ellis Island 1904. My dad didn't talk about his life in the old country where he was born and lived until he was barmitzahed. Jews were subjected to Pogroms that destroyed their homes and killed them. Jews were described as Christ killers by the non-Jewish community People who made the decision to leave had to bear a government that put up blockages in their efforts to emigrate. The Odessa story provides descripions of the members of the family, Mendel, Henya and the children. They were an observant Jewish family in Russia because the parents were strong observers of Judaism. The story actually mostly takes place of the family's life in America. It describes their lives up to the times they are deceased. Mendel and Henya maintan their Jewish observants. Their adult children, on the other hand take on lives as secular Jews. They all change their names from Yiddish to American. The story in the beginning tells somewhat of Mendel's family. Mendel was the youngest of three sons. He was observant like his parents. His oldest brother left their household as a teenager to become a fighter and eventually a leader of the Resistance movement. The story describes the disentangle between him and their father. The oldest son, Shmuel, read books and materials that were about non Jewish themes. Years later when he was in his 40"s he emigrated to Palestine which was before 1948 when It became the state of Israel. The story ends when his great nieces, Dora's children learn of their uncle and make a visit to their great uncles side of his family and receive a memoir book written by him. Odessa was a good novel. It gives an excellent description of the characters in it. It describes their lives and makes comparisons among them. I recommend it especially for young people whose lives are so different of people who were born over a hundred years before them.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Engrossing Story of the Immigrant Experience

Odessa Odessa is a multigenerational story of an immigrant Jewish family—spanning more than a hundred years and three continents. Well-researched and beautifully written, its characters are complex and three-dimensional—people whom you want to know and understand. In addition to being an engrossing and well-told story, Odessa, Odessa is a lesson for our times, when prejudice and anti-immigrant sentiments are causing many to forget that this country was built by immigrants. Whether in the 20th century or the 21st, the immigrants arriving at our shores or borders contribute mightily to our country and our culture, and their stories are a wealth of education and insight. I’m so glad Barbara Artson told this one.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not my favorite book

Too many characters not well developed. Jumpy writing style
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Take with grain of salt

I would have given this 5 stars but once I got toward the end and author tried to preach the plight of the Arabs that call themselves Palestinians I almost stopped at that point. Just so the world will know No one can be born into Refugeeism as the Pseudo-Palestinians claim to have happen. They are political pons used by the factions that rule them so peace will never be achieved , at least not by arrogant presidents or any other human beings, shalom Israel! MARANATHA!
✓ Verified Purchase

Make the most of your Covid-19 homestay: read Odessa, Odessa.

March 16, 2020. This has to be a time when we all have flashbacks (and do a little research to augment them), to the early 1900's and what was going on then. The Spanish Flu was one key event of that time. It killed approximately 675,000 Americans. Another big event was the vast immigration of Jews to the United States from eastern Europe. According to Wikipedia, "by 1880 there were 225,000 Jews in the U.S. Between 1880 and the start of World War I in 1914, about 2,000,000 Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi Jews immigrated from Eastern Europe, where repeated pogroms made life untenable."

Barbara brings this history to life through the tale she weaves of a family living in Western Russia that experiences these pogroms and flees to the U.S. for sanctuary and the hope of a new life. It's a hard journey and the family is not perfect. It is not dysfunctional either. It's a family with all the trials and tribulations, misunderstandings and joys one would expect of real human beings. Barbara does an excellent job of capturing that humanity and bringing this important period in our history to life.

Curl up and make the most of your enforced home stay. And if you are reading this review post-Covid-19: congratulations, you made it. I hope your friends, family and community made it through as well. I also hope that we can look back upon this period with pride for how we treated each other. Evidently, we did not do very well during the Spanish Flu. Actually, not well at all. Let's be inspired by Odessa Odessa to live out the best of who we are during this period of uncertainty.

Seth Bernstein,
Corvallis, OR
✓ Verified Purchase

Make the most of your Covid-19 homestay: read Odessa, Odessa.

March 16, 2020. This has to be a time when we all have flashbacks (and do a little research to augment them), to the early 1900's and what was going on then. The Spanish Flu was one key event of that time. It killed approximately 675,000 Americans. Another big event was the vast immigration of Jews to the United States from eastern Europe. According to Wikipedia, "by 1880 there were 225,000 Jews in the U.S. Between 1880 and the start of World War I in 1914, about 2,000,000 Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi Jews immigrated from Eastern Europe, where repeated pogroms made life untenable."

Barbara brings this history to life through the tale she weaves of a family living in Western Russia that experiences these pogroms and flees to the U.S. for sanctuary and the hope of a new life. It's a hard journey and the family is not perfect. It is not dysfunctional either. It's a family with all the trials and tribulations, misunderstandings and joys one would expect of real human beings. Barbara does an excellent job of capturing that humanity and bringing this important period in our history to life.

Curl up and make the most of your enforced home stay. And if you are reading this review post-Covid-19: congratulations, you made it. I hope your friends, family and community made it through as well. I also hope that we can look back upon this period with pride for how we treated each other. Evidently, we did not do very well during the Spanish Flu. Actually, not well at all. Let's be inspired by Odessa Odessa to live out the best of who we are during this period of uncertainty.

Seth Bernstein,
Corvallis, OR
✓ Verified Purchase

Another I couldn't put down

I enjoyed the way this book was written. From the 1800's into the present. It took me along on the journey. I loved the descriptions of the sisters visit to Israel as well as the journal exposed at the end. I read late into the night and early in the morning.
✓ Verified Purchase

Timely and Poignant.

A beautifully written book and an absolute worthwhile read! A familial tale of immigration and assimilation at a time when we need to be reminded of the reality, hardship, courage, and love of these journeys. I really love this book.
✓ Verified Purchase

A true and engaging saga of the 20th Century. Kudos Ms Artson!

This is a real tale of real people, the counterparts of whom are all over the world and live among us. My cousin Barbara is one of those, and I've admired her beauty, grace, charm and intellect since I was a little boy and she was my big cousin from New Jersey. Uncle Dottie and Aunt Sid would be very proud to hear their saga so beautifully recounted. I look forward to the audio rendition.
✓ Verified Purchase

A good read

This was a very touching book! I enjoyed it very much and would definitely suggest it to friends! Found it well written and informative and entertaining. The author did a good job of keeping me interested.