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What people are saying about Those Absent:

Part history, part detective story, part personal memoir, Those Absent brings to life a cast of characters fitting for a Dickensian novel, deals with the fallibility of memory, the nature of prejudice and persecution, and the past as both history and fiction.
Dr Michael Talalay, Writer, Lecturer, Regents University London

A fascinating literary journey, and frank investigation of the region’s daily life, its common beliefs and rarely mentioned truths. Highly recommended.
Mel Cederbaum, Executive Director, Toronto Workmen's Circle

Part memoir, part travelogue, part history, part elegy, this multi-layered homage to the Great Hungarian Plain embraces its majesty and tragedy at virtually the last possible moment.
Robin Roger, Psychotherapist, Writer, Reviewer

The long history of hatred toward the Jews combined with the exploitation and misery of the peasants have forged Hungarian identity. Jill Culiner’s Central Europe is plagued by the same demons that led to the tragedies of the past century.
Dr Marcel Calvez, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Rennes, France

In a narrative of village life, coarse xenophobia and cruelty contrast with acceptance, friendship and laughter. The horror of the past is concealed, yet Culiner finds compassion in human failure.
Penny-Lynn Cookson, Art Historian, Writer

Links:Claret Press: https://www.claretpress.com/book/those-absent

https://mybook.to/GreatPlain 

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/book/1144541656?ean=9781910461723

 

Tag(s) : #Central Europe,, #Great Hungarian Plain, #Hungarian Village Life, #Jewish History, #Jewish peddlers, Eastern Europe,, #Jews, Hungarian Jews,, #Pogroms, #Puszta
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