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Jacob's Courage: A Holocaust Love Story

by Charles S. Weinblatt

Jacob's Courage: A Holocaust Love Story Cover

ISBN13: 9789657344248
ISBN10: 9657344247
Condition:
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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Jacob's Courage is a beautiful love story set against the backdrop of the Holocaust. Jacob's Courage chronicles the dazzling beauty of passionate love and enduring bravery in a lurid world where the innocent are brutally murdered. In 1939, seventeen-year-old Austrians Jacob Silverman and Rachael Goldberg are bright, talented, and deeply in love. Because they are Jews, their families lose everything; their jobs, possessions and money, contact with loved ones, and finally their liberty at the hands of the Nazis. Jacob and Rachael grow up during the Holocaust. As teenagers, they survive the beatings, rapes, and murderous acts of the Nazis, enjoy the physical and spiritual pleasure of being in love and are able to become husband and wife in the Theresienstadt Ghetto, before being imprisoned in Auschwitz. Eventually Jacob and Rachael become Partisans to fight the Nazi enemy. While Jacob's Courage is a novel, the author, Charles Weinblatt, has based portions of the story on his mother's experience. Clara Volk Weinblatt was a childhood victim of pogroms in her Russian Jewish village. Much of Weinblatt's maternal extended family perished in the Holocaust. Great grandparents, great-aunts and uncles and many cousins disappeared into the void of Nazi annihilation. This book is dedicated to the 6,000,000 Jews who perished in the Holocaust. They have been lost, but will never be forgotten. Jacob's Courage is Holocaust literature for adult readers.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 3 comments:

cweinbl, March 10, 2008 (view all comments by cweinbl)
If the unspeakable horror
that was the Holocaust can
be encapsulated in single
moments, perhaps they would
be similar to the terrible scenes
in Weinblatt’s fictional story
of teenage Jacob Silverman
and his family — seeing lives
snuffed out in the execution
pit as bulldozers push dirt
over the still-breathing, in
the concentration camp
showers as Zyklon-B engulfs
screaming women and
children, in the Auschwitz
medical laboratory as internal
organs are removed from the
living without anesthesia. The
author maintains a driving,
relentless pace as Jacob and
his beloved Rachael try to
escape the madness of Nazi
Germany while maintaining
their humanity; in the end, the
visionary protagonist (Jacob
sees his future in a series of
prophetic dreams) comes to
echo his Biblical counterpart
who fled danger in his own
country and saw a lifechanging
vision in his dreams.

---- Cynthia Nowak
Exec Editor, Toledo Alumni Magazine
University of Toledo
Fall, 2007
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cweinbl, March 10, 2008 (view all comments by cweinbl)
Jacob’s Courage is a very well researched novel that vividly brings the realities of the Holocaust to life through the eyes of two people, Jacob, the title character, and Rachel, the girl he falls in love with as the war breaks out and eventually marries in the Theresienstadt Ghetto, only to be separated at deportation to Auschwitz. The gripping epic story follows each of their paths from their pre-war Jewish community to their expulsions, their ghetto life, their separation via deportations, their experiences in slave labor camps, in death camps, in the resistance, on death marches, and their liberations and miraculous reunification. In each setting, the vivid portrayals of the travails of the principals and the other characters in the novel bring the experience of the Holocaust to life on a personal level. The book depicts the brutality of the Nazis and their henchmen, exposing the demonic and cruel nature of too many human beings during that era. The characters are faced with hard choices of life and death, betrayal and loyalty. The events of the novel are gut wrenching and heart rending.

The book could just as well been called Jacob and Rachel’s Courage as the parallel stories of each of their experiences during the Holocaust exhibit equal measures of courage in the face of depravity and adversity that seems too incredible to believe were it not an accurate depiction of the reality of what took place in the heart of 20th century Europe. It well fulfills the role of good historical fiction by giving the reader the experience of living through an historical event by depicting the many aspects of life at that time through the experiences of the central and secondary characters. First time author Weinblatt is very successful in this regard. His Holocaust is very real and very accurate in the descriptions of the locales and the conditions of existence of each setting. The people that populate the novel are not merely two dimensional archetypes or clichés but fully formed humans with frailties and shortcomings in addition to positive qualities.

Although it is a novel, it is an excellent primer on the Holocaust. The reader will be left with a very accurate understanding of this cataclysmic time from a historical perspective, but with the additional emotions evoked that a dry history book cannot provide. Perhaps this is its greatest strength. Though the book is epic in length and scope, Weinblatt’s characters and characterizations compel the reader to read onward. At the end of the read one feels both hope and admiration for the human spirit that can endure and survive the ordeals of the various victims depicted, although fictional but not unlike experiences endured by actual survivors, and disgust and despair with the dark side of the human spirit because the historical facts of the Holocaust in which the novel is set are all too true.

One unfortunate shortcoming is an excess of typos and word omissions representing significant editing shortcomings on the part of the publisher.

---Hindea Markowicz

Hindea Markowicz is Director of the Ruth Fajerman Markowicz Holocaust Resource Center of Greater Toledo (OH).
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(1 of 1 readers found this comment helpful)
cweinbl, March 10, 2008 (view all comments by cweinbl)
This novel traces the progression of the Nazi war machine from its onset to the Holocaust’s devastating conclusion through the thoughts and experiences of the central character, Jacob Silverman, a seventeen-year-old aspiring musician and law student from Salzburg, Austria. Jacob is the only son of a prominent local doctor, Moshe Silverman, and his kind but troubled wife, Hanna. Rachel Goldberg is the love of Jacob’s life and the daughter of Ariel, another respected physician in Salzburg and a close friend and colleague of Jacob’s father. Through Jacob and Rachel’s bond the families become further connected and their destinies intertwined.

Long before Hitler’s army puts its plans for the annihilation of the Jewish people into motion, Jacob has a horrific dream so vivid that he is convinced it must be a premonition warning him of the atrocities to come. From isolation to starvation and torture, Jacob bears witness as the Nazis systematically dehumanize the Jewish race, bringing their brazen plot for extermination ever closer to reality. Jacob’s feelings of powerlessness are often interrupted by thoughts of rebellion and escape and the possibility that God has a greater plan for him, a destiny bound to leadership and the survival of Judaism.

Mixed among the detailed descriptions of the surreal atrocities inflicted upon the Jews of Europe is a tender coming of age tale. Jacob and Rachel’s love flourishes amid the ghettos and concentration camps where they are forced to reside. While their emotional strength and devotion is to be commended, the revealed details of their relationship often feel misplaced and inappropriate set against the backdrop of destitute labor and death camps. The inner thoughts of individual characters revealed regularly throughout the book are also distracting as the dialogue has a tendency to be redundant and unrealistic under the circumstances. This book shows the critical roles that love, determination, and steadfast belief play toward battling one’s demons both physically and mentally. While at times difficult to digest, Jacob’s Courage is ultimately a tribute to the triumphant human spirit.

---- Jewish Book World, Winter 2007-08
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Product Details

ISBN:
9789657344248
Author:
Weinblatt, Charles S.
Publisher:
Mazo Publishers
Subject:
Holocaust
Subject:
Historical fiction
Subject:
Romance
Subject:
History
Subject:
World History-Holocaust
Publication Date:
20070331
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Language:
English
Pages:
524
Dimensions:
9.21x6.14x1.05 in. 1.60 lbs.

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Jacob's Courage: A Holocaust Love Story New Trade Paper
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