Synopses & Reviews
As a child, William Holtz was fascinated with the Greek myth of the autochthonous warriors rising parentless from the earth; and as a young man, self-consciously lifting himself out of the Depression-era poverty of his parents' life, he often thought of himself as essentially self-created, independent of the family he was born into. More recently, in late middle age, Holtz has found himself reassessing his place in his family. The result is a deeply moving, lyrical, and sensitive memoir.
In Gathering the Family the author re-creates scenes and episodes from his early life with his family. Although he begins his work as a biographer, Holtz comes to turn his researcher's eye on himself, frankly examining his thoughts of the family he grew up with. These interlocking essays examine the lives of his mother's struggling Finnish immigrant parents, who spoke no English; of his father's large, festive German American family; and of his doomed, laughing father, his gentle, overburdened mother, and his self-destructive younger brother. The intertwining effects of heredity, circumstance, and choice in individual lives are played out poignantly as he discovers that the family he was so troubled by in his youth has made him what he has become today.
Every reader will come to care deeply about the family members Holtz portrays and will be reminded of personal and formative family experiences. Gathering the Family will compel each of us to rexamine our own places in the families that have shaped our lives.
Review
"It is common today for reviewers to say that a book is beautifully written. This one truly is. Great care has gone into the shaping of every sentence, every paragraph, every chapter, with a concern for preserving the accents of the author's speaking voice. It is a book for reading aloud, for sharing with a loved one: partner, companion, friend, another family member, as one might share one's own family recollections. . . . It will become a classic in the rich literature of the memoir."—Robert A. Erickson
Review
"Holtz captures the essence of family, tracing the way in which, through the generations, strengths, weaknesses, habits, and particular needs are passed down. This is a deeply considered and honest work of universal import."—Kirkus
About the Author
William Holtz is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He is the author or editor of several books, including the widely acclaimed The Ghost in the Little House: A Life of Rose Wilder Lane and Dorothy Thompson and Rose Wilder Lane: Forty Years of Friendship, Letters, 1921-1960.