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Opa Nobody (American Lives)by Sonya Huber
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:It had come to this: breastfeeding her screaming three-month-old while sitting on the cigarette-scarred floor of a union hall, lying to her husband so she could attend yet another activist meeting, and otherwise actively self-destructing. Then Sonya Huber turned to her long-dead grandfather, the family “nobody,” for help.
Huber’s search for meaning and resonance in the life of her grandfather Heina Buschman was unusual insofar as she knew him only through dismissive family stories: He let his wife die of neglect . . . he used his infant son as a decoy when transporting anti-Nazi literature in a baby carriage . . . and so the stories went. What she actually discovered was that, like his granddaughter, Heina Buschman was a committed and beleaguered activist whose story echoed her own. Huber’s research not only conjured her grandfather’s voice in answer to many of the questions that troubled her but also found in his story a source of personal sustenance for herself. Based on extensive research and documentation, this story of Heina Buschman offers a rare look into the heart of the “average” socialist trying to survive the Nazis and rebuild a broken world. Alternating with his voice is Huber’s own, providing a rich and moving counterpoint that makes this deeply personal exploration of family, politics, and individual responsibility a story for all of us and for all time. Review:"In every chapter, [Huber] weaves stories of her activist life with richly imagined scenes of her grandfather, reconstructing his life from anecdotes and documentary evidence. . . . By connecting with history on such a personal level, she reveals how ordinary citizens can get swept up into movements of all kinds; allegiance is never as simple as a membership card. Most radically of all for a progressive activist, Huber embraces the past. Instead of tossing it all out in search of something new, she ties a firm knot between then and now."-Karrie Higgins, Los Angeles Times Review:"Sonya Huber is a writer of remarkable talent and courage. With great passion and skill, she resurrects her grandfather in this story of a family in the years leading up to and away from Hitler's Third Reich. Painstakingly researched and richly imagined, Opa Nobody is a brave book of politics, history, and love-a book filled with an irrepressible embrace of humanity."-Lee Martin, author of The Bright Forever and From Our House (Lee Martin, Jan 8 2007 )Review:"Sonya Huber begins her innovative memoir with a question: `Why try to change the world?' Thus begins an intimate dialogue with her long-dead, activist grandfather-part fact, part imagination-that delves into the nature of political resistance and the toll this stance takes on those intrepid souls who dare to live on the edge of change."-Brenda Miller, author of Season of the Body and coauthor of Tell It Slant (Brenda Miller, Jun 14 2007 )Review:"Opa Nobody is a masterful layering of lives, a beautifully readable and often poetic tracing of the heart lines between grandfather and granddaughter, old leftie and new, Nazi-era German rabble-rouser and present-day American activist. Sonya Huber imagines her way into her hero's childhood, his neighborhoods, his friendships, and finally into his passions-both political and romantic-which in the end are her own. The research in Opa Nobody is prodigious, the history fascinating, the quest for justice inspiring, but the lives here are what will keep you reading, page after page, long into the clamorous night."-Bill Roorbach, author of Temple Stream and Big Bend (Bill Roorbach, Jul 30 2007 )Review:"Writing family history is a notoriously fraught enterprise. . . . Sonya Huber's book of creative nonfiction, Opa Nobody, tracks an innovative course through this thorny landscape. . . . [I]t is precisely Huber's play with the imaginative possibilities in the gaps between historical fact and family memory that makes her project so poetic and moving. . . . Through her admirably candid writing, Huber makes visible the inability of political activism to manage failure and despair."-Valerie Weaver-Zercher, The Christian Century About the AuthorSonya Huber is an assistant professor in the Department of Writing and Linguistics at Georgia Southern University. She is the author of many short stories, essays, and poems. What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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