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How to Make a Life: A Novel

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

How to Make a Life: A Novel

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781631527791

Publisher:

She Writes Press

Imprint:

She Writes Press

Publication Date:

26th November 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Dewey:

813.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

328

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 215mm

Description

Seeking refuge from harm for both themselves and their progeny, Ida and her daughter Bessie flee a pogrom in Ukraine for America-but once there, family secrets, betrayals, and mistakes made in the name of love undermine the lives of their children and grandchildren. Eventually, they all must find the courage to forgive and take comfort in the bonds of family.

Reviews

2021 CIBA Goethe Book Awards Finalist
2020 Best Book Awards Finalist in Fiction: Women's Fiction


An engaging and heartfelt portrayal of intergenerational trauma and hope.
Kirkus Reviews

How to Make a Life is a sharp historical novel whose panoptic view of family relationships makes its secrets, estrangements, and reconciliations satisfying.
Foreword Clarion Review

. . . an immigrant story that will delight readers interested in how the seed of tragedy in one life takes root to produce hope in the future. Its a full-bodied story that will attract novel readers looking for a read both epic and well grounded in both adversity and recovery.
Midwest Book Review

How to Make a Life: A Novel by Florence Reiss Kraut is a beautifully written historical novel that explores family themes and the challenges of emigration. . . . The prose is gorgeous, the narrative voice compelling and hugely observant. The relationships are well-handled and they feel real to readers. There are pathos, realism, and humanity infused in the writing and I found it easy to relate to the characters. How to Make a Life: A Novel is a spellbinding family saga with strong shades of history; it is engrossing and fast-paced.
Readers' Favorite, 5-star review

The world of richly drawn characters in How to Make a Life transported me on a compelling emotional journey. In a story that brings the twentieth century to life, the powerful need to assimilate threatens the very bonds that ground an immigrant family with a sense of identity as four generations adapt to a culture that reinvents itself with every decade.
Stephanie Lehmann, author of Astor Place Vintage

Florence Reiss Krauts rich, gutsy, and poignant novel, How to Make a Life, is the saga of four generations of an immigrant family held together by the legacy of trauma and the loyalties of succeeding generations. All the challenges of any real family are woven through this complex story. Krauts superb writing and deeply drawn characters, and her faithful evocation of distinct places and eras over the whole of the 20th century, keep the reader grounded and engaged.
Barbara Stark-Nemon, author of award-winning novels Hard Cider and Even in Darkness

How to Make a Life grabs by the throat and heart from page one. It parallels the gut-wrenching horrors of war and mental illness and the extraordinary and ordinary struggles and sacrifices family makes to survive. Our great-grandparents, parents, siblings, aunts, uncles, cousins, great-grandchildren, spouses, in-lawsfamilyare the reasons we are who we are, for better or for worse, in sickness and in health.
Patricia Dunn, senior director of The Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College and author of Rebels by Accident

A moving novel of four generations of an immigrant family whose characters are so real I cannot forget them.
Tessa Smith McGovern, author of London Road Linked Stories and host/producer of BookGirl TV

Florence Kraut has written a sensitive and compelling multigenerational novel that begins with tragedy and ends with hope. Each chapter traces a family member who erases the scars of history's indelible mark with courage, determination, faith, and love. A wonderful read.
Marsha Temlock, author of The Exile and Your Child's Divorce: What to Expect; What You Can Do

How to Make a Life is a compelling and inspirational novel. It applauds perseverance, connection and compassion over trauma, separation, and change. Details have a way of creating potency, and the beautiful descriptions in Ms. Kraut's novel brings every character alive. Her images and painterly descriptions inspired me to write about my own family. When stories inspire readers' creativity, you are in the hands of a empathic and evocative writer. I could not put this book down.
June Gould, PhD, author of The Writer in All of Us and IWWG Writing Workshop Leader

A novel about family itselfhow to exist after unimaginable pain, acts of courage, secrets buried and revealed. . . . Emotionally honest, rich, and deeply empathetic, this is a book for all of us nurtured in the tumult and soil of family.
Marlena Maduro Baraf, author of At the Narrow Waist of the World

Florence Reiss Kraut has crafted a literary miracle . . . Her experience as a family therapist is evident throughout the book, especially in her depiction of Ruby, who struggles with psychosis. The impact on family is as close a rendering of this particular challenge as any I have readbrilliant.
Jill Edelman Barberie, MSW, LCSW, author of This Crazy Quilt: Parenting Adult Special Needs One Day at a Time

The years this author worked as an MSW social worker and clinician are particularly evident in the thought processes of Bessies oldest daughter Ruby, who suffers from schizophrenia. I worked for many years as a psychiatric nurse and Ive never read a better character description of the trauma and tribulations that this disease can cause to individuals and families. This novel will appeal to anyone interested in family epics with unexpected plot twists and unforgettable characters. It demonstrates the power of family love, forgiveness, and resiliency.
Story Circle Book Reviews

Author Bio

Florence Reiss Kraut is a native New Yorker, raised and educated in four of the five boroughs of New York City. She holds a BA in English and a masters in social work. She worked for thirty years as a clinician, a family therapist, and the CEO of a family service agency before retiring to write and travel widely. She has published personal essays for The New York Times and her fiction has appeared in journals including The Evening Street Press, SNReview, The Westchester Review, and others. She has three married children and nine grandchildren and lives with her husband in Rye, New York.

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