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Heavyweight
Heavyweight: A Family Story of the Holocaust, Empire, and Memory | Solomon J. Brager
6 posts | 2 read | 2 to read
A moving and provocative graphic memoir exploring inherited trauma, family history, and the ever-shifting understanding of our own identities, for readers of Gender Queer and I Was Their American Dream. Solomon Brager grew up with accounts of their great-grandparents' escape from Nazi Germany, told over and over until their understanding of self was bound up with the heroic details of their ancestors' exploits. Their great-grandmother related how her husband, a boxing champion, thrashed Joseph Goebbels and cleared beer halls of Nazis with his fists, how she broke him out of an internment camp and carried their children over the Pyrenees mountains. But that story was never the whole picture; zooming out, everything becomes more complicated. Alongside the Levis' propulsive journey across Europe and to the United States, Brager distills fascinating research about the Holocaust and connected periods of colonial history. Heavyweight asks us to consider how the patterns of history emerge and reverberate, not as a simple chain of events but in haunting layers. Confronting the specters of violence as both historian and descendent, this book is an exploration of family mythology, intergenerational memory, and the mark the past makes on the present. In conversation with works by Rebecca Hall, Nora Krug, Rutu Modan, and Leela Corman, Heavyweight will contribute to the collective work of Holocaust studies and the chronicle of woven human stories.
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Clare-Dragonfly
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I suppose it‘s appropriate with such a meta, self-referential book that I can‘t think of how to review it without using its own topics. It‘s a heavy subject. It‘s a complex punch of a book. Brager looks into his own family history of escaping the Holocaust, trying to fill in gaps in both their personal history and world history. It has me thinking a lot about my own family‘s escape from Europe. Who didn‘t get out? I know nothing about them.

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Clare-Dragonfly
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I appreciate that Brager manages to fit some relevant humor into a very, well, heavy book!

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Lauredhel
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And with Heavyweight having an airplane on the cover, February is my very first full card for I Spy Bingo 2024!

#ISpyBingo @Clwojick @TheAromaofBooks

LiseWorks Nice 2mo
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! I've been working all 12 cards all year and haven't cleared one yet! 😂 2mo
Lauredhel @TheAromaofBooks I'm working on all 12 too! The race is on 2mo
Read4life Yay!!! 🤓 2mo
37 likes4 comments
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Lauredhel
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Finished this graphic memoir dealing with colonialism, the Holocaust, and generational trauma.

#Pantone2024 #readingchallenge

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Lauredhel
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This historical graphic memoir is a lot. 160 pages in: Solomon Brager explores their family history tracing back through the holocaust and beyond. They situate those atrocities in a long history of colonialism, prejudice, and human rights abuses, with histories from the European invasions of Africa, and tracing forward to today, including issues around Zionism and transphobia. They give time and space to the complicated feelings that arise.

Clare-Dragonfly I have this on hold. Definitely looking forward to it! 2mo
36 likes1 comment
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Lauredhel
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New Libby borrow.

44 likes1 stack add