Carved in Stone
Holocaust Years - A Boy's Tale
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Initial publish date
- Aug 2017
- Category
- Holocaust, General, Jewish
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781487522841
- Publish Date
- Aug 2017
- List Price
- $40.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781487518622
- Publish Date
- Sep 2017
- List Price
- $30.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780802008329
- Publish Date
- Sep 1997
- List Price
- $48.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
The title of this book is taken from Primo Levi's words about survivors of the Holocaust: 'The survivors are divided into two well-defined groups: those who repress their past en bloc, and those whose memory of the offence persists, as though carved in stone.' The memories of Manny Drukier are indelibly inscribed on his mind, and in Carved in Stone he recounts them with honesty and precision.
In 1939, at the age of eleven, Drukier was forced by the Nazis to leave his native city of Lódz, in Poland. His narrative, prompted by his first visit back to Poland after fifty years, begins with his childhood, follows him in and out of various hiding places and to the labour camps, and describes his day of liberation and his later emigration to North America. But this is also the story of the day-to-day life of Jews both before and during the war, providing a detailed account of Drukier's friends and family, and their love, wit, and will to survive.
About the author
Having miraculously survived the Nazi death camps as a teenager in Poland, Manny Drukier triumphed in Canada. A string of odd jobs led him to found a flourishing international furniture manufacturing company. Not content with mere commercial success, he went on to start "The Idler" - a lively, erudite, and controversial literary and current-affairs magazine. In the building he owned and lived in, he established a Georgian-style tavern called the Idler Pub, known for its good beer and bracingly literate talk. Both became legendary in Toronto. Drukier is the author of several novels. "Carved in Stone", the memoir of his Holocaust years, won the Jewish Book Award for non-fiction.
Awards
- Winner, 1997 Prize for Holocaust Literature, Jewish Book Awards
- Winner, Koffler Centre President’s Prize (1997) awarded by the Koffler Centre of the Arts.
Editorial Reviews
"This account by a successful publisher and businessman should be widely read. It is by a survivor of rare sensitivity who assures us as did Walt Whitman in a different context, "I know, I suffered, I was there.""
Canadian Jewish News
"He has two stories to tell and does so remarkably well in this book of memoirs. Masterfully, he moves the narrative from the past to the present and back again, incorporating the sad and horrific recollections of the war years with those of his (and his wife Freda’s) travels through Poland in the fall of 1991."
Winnipeg Free Press
"Seldom have I read a manuscript that has moved me like Manny Drukier’s Carved in Stone: Holocaust Years - A Boy’s Tale."
Edmonton Jewish News
‘Drukier is sustained by the memory of sustenance, and his ability to feel it so intensely is charming. In fact, the intelligent and restrained way in which he shares his tale gives us a portrait of the survivor as a truly admirable person. He is frank about his suffering without being maudlin, intelligent in his analysis of the social forces at play in Europe, generous with the details that brings his world to life. The superior abilities that enabled him to survive are now put to the task of testimony, and serve him and the reader well.’
Books in Canada
"Drukier never presents himself as a hero. He has no time for introspection during the war; the daily search for food is what occupies his thoughts, and the ingenuity he displays in getting an extra portion … is what carries much of the narrative forward. His final moments with his mother and sister, and his father (with whom he was in touch until the elder Drukier’s death from starvation) are numbingly, achingly beautiful. Drukier does not write sentimentally about these things – he simply recounts them, and the effect is almost unbearable."
Quill and Quire