Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

Mimi Schwartz's father was born Jewish in a tiny German village thirty years before the advent of Hitler when, as he'd tell her, "We all got along." In her original memoir, Good Neighbors, Bad Times, Schwartz explored how human decency fared among Christian and Jewish neighbors before, during, and after Nazi times. Ten years after its publication, a letter arrived from a man named Max Sayer in South Australia. Sayer, it turns out, grew up Catholic in the village during the Third Reich and in 1937 moved into an abandoned Jewish home five houses away from where the family of Schwartz's father had lived for generations before fleeing to America a few months earlier. The two families had never met.

Sayer wrote an unpublished memoir about his childhood memories and in Schwartz's new edition, Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited, the two memoirs talk to each other. Weaving excerpts from Sayer's memoir and from a yearlong correspondence with him into her book, Schwartz revisits village history from a new perspective, deepening our understanding of decency and demonization. Given the rise of xenophobia, white supremacy, and anti-Semitism in the world today, this exploration seems more urgent than ever.

Mimi Schwartz is professor emerita in the writing program at Stockton University. She is the award-winning author of numerous books, including Thoughts from a Queen-Sized Bed (Nebraska, 2003) and When History Is Personal (Nebraska, 2018), and is the coauthor of Writing True: The Art and Craft of Creative Nonfiction.

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Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

Mimi Schwartz's father was born Jewish in a tiny German village thirty years before the advent of Hitler when, as he'd tell her, "We all got along." In her original memoir, Good Neighbors, Bad Times, Schwartz explored how human decency fared among Christian and Jewish neighbors before, during, and after Nazi times. Ten years after its publication, a letter arrived from a man named Max Sayer in South Australia. Sayer, it turns out, grew up Catholic in the village during the Third Reich and in 1937 moved into an abandoned Jewish home five houses away from where the family of Schwartz's father had lived for generations before fleeing to America a few months earlier. The two families had never met.

Sayer wrote an unpublished memoir about his childhood memories and in Schwartz's new edition, Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited, the two memoirs talk to each other. Weaving excerpts from Sayer's memoir and from a yearlong correspondence with him into her book, Schwartz revisits village history from a new perspective, deepening our understanding of decency and demonization. Given the rise of xenophobia, white supremacy, and anti-Semitism in the world today, this exploration seems more urgent than ever.

Mimi Schwartz is professor emerita in the writing program at Stockton University. She is the award-winning author of numerous books, including Thoughts from a Queen-Sized Bed (Nebraska, 2003) and When History Is Personal (Nebraska, 2018), and is the coauthor of Writing True: The Art and Craft of Creative Nonfiction.

24.95 In Stock
Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

by Mimi Schwartz
Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited: New Echoes of My Father's German Village

by Mimi Schwartz

Paperback(New Edition)

$24.95 
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Overview

Mimi Schwartz's father was born Jewish in a tiny German village thirty years before the advent of Hitler when, as he'd tell her, "We all got along." In her original memoir, Good Neighbors, Bad Times, Schwartz explored how human decency fared among Christian and Jewish neighbors before, during, and after Nazi times. Ten years after its publication, a letter arrived from a man named Max Sayer in South Australia. Sayer, it turns out, grew up Catholic in the village during the Third Reich and in 1937 moved into an abandoned Jewish home five houses away from where the family of Schwartz's father had lived for generations before fleeing to America a few months earlier. The two families had never met.

Sayer wrote an unpublished memoir about his childhood memories and in Schwartz's new edition, Good Neighbors, Bad Times Revisited, the two memoirs talk to each other. Weaving excerpts from Sayer's memoir and from a yearlong correspondence with him into her book, Schwartz revisits village history from a new perspective, deepening our understanding of decency and demonization. Given the rise of xenophobia, white supremacy, and anti-Semitism in the world today, this exploration seems more urgent than ever.

Mimi Schwartz is professor emerita in the writing program at Stockton University. She is the award-winning author of numerous books, including Thoughts from a Queen-Sized Bed (Nebraska, 2003) and When History Is Personal (Nebraska, 2018), and is the coauthor of Writing True: The Art and Craft of Creative Nonfiction.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496221209
Publisher: Nebraska
Publication date: 03/01/2021
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 318
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Mimi Schwartz is professor emerita in the writing program at Stockton University. She is the award-winning author of numerous books, including Thoughts from a Queen-Sized Bed (Nebraska, 2003) and When History Is Personal (Nebraska, 2018), and is the coauthor of Writing True: The Art and Craft of Creative Nonfiction. For more information about the author, visit mimischwartz.net.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations    
Preface: Why I’m Revisiting Good Neighbors, Bad Times    
Author’s Note to the First Edition    
Part One. Close to Home
1. Treadmill to the Past    
2. Anonymous Translation    
3. At the Nachmittag    
4. Kaffeeklatsch    
5. Joie de Vivre    
6. Four Stories of the Torah    
7. The Revolving Room    
Part Two. An Ocean Away
8. Off the Record    
9. A Little Respect, Please    
10. The Good Raincoat    
11. Hedwig, Fritz, and “Schtumpela”    
12. The Second Generation    
Part Three. Back and Forth
13. Willy from Baltimore    
14. Five Kilometers Away    
15. A House of Antiques    
16. Truth Transposed    
17. What Willy’s Neighbor Says . . .    
18. The Red Album    
19. Where Legend Ends    
20. At My Father’s Grave    
Part Four. End Points
21. The Other Miriam    
22. Three Little Girls    
23. Yes or No?    
24. The Celebration    
Coda: The Conversation Continues
Acknowledgments
Discussion Questions
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