Painful Joy Spiral-Bound |
Max J. Friedman
Painful Joy
Painful Joy represents five years of research by a devoted son, seeking to unearth the life stories of Sam and Frieda Friedman in order to discover their roots and uncover their remarkable journeys and painful secrets.
Painful Joy represents five years of intensive research in the US, Poland, Sweden, Israel and Germany, seeking to unearth the real life stories of Sam and Frieda Friedman in order to discover their roots, recreate their lives and times and uncover both their remarkable journeys and painful secrets. Part memoir, part genealogical mystery and part history, the book is an absorbing, heartwarming and, at times, heartbreaking tale as readers accompany the author on his extraordinary exploration of the complicated relationship between two Holocaust survivors who meet in Sweden after their liberation, and experience the "painful joy" of a love too often touched by death.
"Max opens a door for us to enter a shared world; a world touched by his family's pain, longing, love, sorrow and hope. His gentle, respectful and caring writing style will leave a mark upon you after you close the book for the last time - inviting you to open the door again." - Rabbi Steven Silberman, Congregation Ahavas Chesed, Mobile, AL
"A narrative unique to second-generation Holocaust survivors' experiences that searches to understand 'beyond the ghosts that haunted them.'" - John Heffernan, Director, Genocide Prevention Initiative, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and President, Foundation for Systemic Change
"Factual content, precise descriptions of environs, explanations of customs and mores ... as well as personal musings are beautifully woven within the memoir. Friedman's command of the English language is superb, and the reader will be immersed in the narrative." - Millie Jasper, Executive Director, Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center, White Plains, NY
"Painful Joy is like no other Holocaust story I have read. It is mostly biography ... But it is also memoir ... and autobiography ... all told against the backdrop of a once vibrant Jewish life in Poland, the Holocaust, and immigrant life in the United States ..." - Gerald Darring, Co-Director, Gulf Coast Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education, Mobile, AL