Title: The Lost Town
Synopsis:
Trochenbrod was a bustling commercial center of more than 5,000 people, all Jews, hidden deep in the forest in Northwest Ukraine. It thrived as a tiny Jewish kingdom unnoticed and unknown to most people, even though it was “the big city” for surrounding Ukrainian and Polish villages. The people of Trochenbrod vanished in the Holocaust, and soon nothing remained of this vibrant 130-year-old town but a mysterious double row of trees and bushes in a clearing in the forest.
In this new book, Avrom Bendavid-Val makes Trochenbrod’s true story accessible, enjoyable, and memorable for young readers. The Lost Town follows his adventures while uncovering the lost history of the magical place where his father was born and raised. An imagined Trochenbrod was the setting for Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel, Everything is Illuminated, and the movie by the same name.
Author: Avrom Bendavid-Val
Series: N/A
Pages: N/A
Date Published: 2015
Format: Kindle
Genre: YA Nonfiction
Trochenbrod was a bustling commercial center of more than 5,000 people, all Jews, hidden deep in the forest in Northwest Ukraine. It thrived as a tiny Jewish kingdom unnoticed and unknown to most people, even though it was “the big city” for surrounding Ukrainian and Polish villages. The people of Trochenbrod vanished in the Holocaust, and soon nothing remained of this vibrant 130-year-old town but a mysterious double row of trees and bushes in a clearing in the forest.
In this new book, Avrom Bendavid-Val makes Trochenbrod’s true story accessible, enjoyable, and memorable for young readers. The Lost Town follows his adventures while uncovering the lost history of the magical place where his father was born and raised. An imagined Trochenbrod was the setting for Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel, Everything is Illuminated, and the movie by the same name.
~Try an Excerpt!~
As I was
growing up, my father did not often mention the town Trochenbrod (pronounced
Trawkhenbrawd) in Eastern Poland where he was born and raised. But when he did,
his longing and affection for it were unmistakable. After my father passed
away, I realized I knew nothing about his beloved hometown. He had never
volunteered information about it, and I had never asked. Although none of my
relatives knew where Trochenbrod had been located, other than “in Poland
someplace,” they were certain nothing was there anymore. I was told that after
the Nazis murdered all Trochenbrod’s Jews, they destroyed all its buildings,
and the memory of it was lost.
How could
that be? I wondered. How could all traces of a town and its people vanish? If
the town was destroyed in the Holocaust, wouldn’t something—derelict buildings,
house foundations, low stone walls—still be found there? And what happened to
Christian neighbors of the Jews who lived in Trochenbrod? They weren’t
destroyed by the Nazis; maybe their descendants were still there and could tell
me something about Trochenbrod in the days when Jews also lived there. I had to
find out. I had to see for myself.
~Meet Avrom!~
Avrom Bendavid-Val was working as an environmental consultant in Poland in 1997 when he decided to cross the Ukrainian border and visit the place his father came from, the town of Trochenbrod. Finding nothing there, he was determined to uncover the history and spirit of the vanished town. Avrom continues to this day to research, write and make films about the town, and serve as the anchor for the American community of Trochenbrod descendants. Avrom Bendavid-Val lives in Washington, D.C.
Avrom will be awarding a $10 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
I think this story would haunt me. All the more reason to read it. I love the photograph on the cover.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think makes a good story?
ReplyDeleteThank you for the wonderful giveaway! The book sounds very interesting.
ReplyDeleteInteresting bio!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a compelling book, thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteLove the excerpt.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fabulous read.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds awesome! I love historical fiction that makes a period of the past more accessible in the present. On my TBR list. -V
ReplyDeleteThank you for the excerpt, I enjoyed reading it and getting to know your story.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing this. The cover is beautiful. My favorite type of book to read is historical fiction.
ReplyDelete