Pass the Trauma, Please: My Father's not-so-depressing Holocaust memoir about love, loss, laughter, and legacy
By (Author) Todd Diamond
Foreword by Abe Foxman
Fig Tree Books
Fig Tree Books
2nd January 2026
United States
General
Non Fiction
Biography: general
Memoirs
Hardback
268
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 25mm
PASS THE TRAUMA, PLEASE is a comedy-drama memoir that presents the most brutal moment of Jewish history in an unorthodox manner. It honors the life lessons of a Holocaust survivor who reveals long-buried truths about surviving as an orphan and soldier who fought for Israeli independence. His scandalous secrets are disclosed to his son during an unforgettable Sunday night dinner in a Chinese restaurant.
But it's not just stories that were passed down from a survivor to his children. Genetically Inherited Holocaust Trauma hitches a ride, resulting in his son's dysfunctional relationships and dubious behaviors.
Like many books about the Holocaust, PASS THE TRAUMA, PLEASE addresses loss. But there's also drug smuggling, attempts to reverse a circumcision, brothels, kibbutz ambushes, divorce, death camp visits, decadent nights at Studio 54, and tales of lost virginity.
Despite his own insecurities as a writer, plus deep concerns that other genocides might soon eclipse the Holocaust, a catalyst that drives the author is... will he finish the book while his father, one of the last Holocaust survivors, is still alive
Another motivation for the book's unique structure and irreverent tone is the challenge thrown down by Todd Diamond's father who said, "Do me a favor, son. No long-winded descriptions of the smells in the Ghetto, the corpses. Everyone knows this already. Elie Wiesel, Primo Levy, Anne Frank, that guy who wrote the comic book about the mouse, they all covered it. Don't be afraid to slip in a few jokes. What do you call it again... that bullshit you always say... oh yeah, write something poster-punk."He meant to say, post-punk. Todd's father concluded his appeal by saying, "And besides, you're no Elie Wiesel."
So, while PASS THE TRAUMA, PLEASE probes the darkness of humanity, you'll also find an equal amount of irreverence and humor that distinguishes it from most holocaust memoirs.
Put another way, if Mel Brooks and Amy Schumer adopted a second-generation Holocaust survivor, raised him, then sent him off to a writer's retreat for anxious Jews, you'd get PASS THE TRAUMA, PLEASE.
To reach an ever-growing uninformed audience about the Holocaust, Todd Diamond has written this new resonant memoir, PASS THE TRAUMA, PLEASE with the intent to try and engage a wider, more diverse audience with different perspective that illuminates the past in a way that will help new generations of readers to understand the ongoing impact of these tragedies on succeeding generations.
Second-Generation Holocaust memoirs are bridges between the past and the future and useful reminders of the complex ways trauma manifests and is transmitted across generations. Pass the Trauma, Please isn't just about the death camps, the gas chambers, the incomprehensible evil. It's about the Holocaust and its aftershocks. The unrelenting ripple effect of a unique trauma that echoes through children raised in the long shadow of tragedy. He writes his story and the story of his parents and his extended family who perished in the Holocaust in a provocative and irreverent style to hopeful appeal and educate a broader readership. To that end, Todd finds light and humor amidst the wreckage, a real testament to the power of memory.
"Pass the Trauma, Please isn't just about the death camps, the gas chambers, the incomprehensible evil. It's about the Holocaust and its aftershocks. The unrelenting ripple effect of a unique trauma that echoes through children raised in the long shadow of tragedy." --ABE FOXMAN, former national director of the Anti-Defamation League.
"This original, provocative, and irreverent memoir presents us with a unique second-generation Holocaust survivor viewpoint that is worthy of a film script. It helps us fathom the unfathomable and even manages to make us laugh along the way. This is not your typical Holocaust story in any way, shape, or form, and therein lies its strength."--JAY ROSENBLATT, Academy Award-nominated director
"It takes great courage to confront one's demons by sharing them with your children, especially when they are now adults. Yet, that's exactly what ninety-year-old Holocaust survivor David Diamondstein finally does--before his time runs out. Written with much love and wit, his son Todd comes to grips with his own trauma by connecting the historic dots between the Holocaust and the rise of current global antisemitism in the post-October 7th world. Pass the Trauma, Please stands as a unique memoir among Holocaust literature because it does far more than document the past. It connects the past to the present." --HAYA MOLNAR, author of Under a Red Sky: Memoir of a Childhood in Communist Romania, winner of the National Jewish Book Award
"The enormity of the Holocaust could not possibly be dissipated in one generation. Todd Diamond's daring, transgressive, entertaining memoir reads like a roller-coaster speeding from past to present and then back again, reimagining the unimaginable, looking for a finishing line that can never be crossed and a legacy that can't be ignored." --THANE ROSENBAUM, author of the post-Holocaust trilogy: The Golems of Gotham, Secondhand Smoke, and Elijah Visible.
"I laughed so hard at some of this and felt sick in other places. Definitely, a whirlwind of emotions. I sure wish I could meet Todd's father. What a story." --ELIZABETH ASDORIAN, creative director, Ancestry.com
Born in Queens, New York, TODD DIAMOND delivers narratives that are unapologetically raw and darkly humorous-a reflection of the borough that raised him. Whether it's sordid tales from his advertising career or stories about his family's Holocaust experiences, he resonates with those who prefer their prose served with a healthy dose of cynicism and unsweetened insight.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR'S STATE OF MIND In 2015, a research team at New York's Mount Sinai Hospital published a paper titled, "Holocaust Exposure Induced Intergenerational Effects on FKBP5 Methylation." Their conclusion "Genetic changes stemming from the trauma suffered by Holocaust survivors are capable of being passed on to their children, the clearest sign yet that one person's life experience can affect subsequent generations." Huh. Genetically Inherited Holocaust Trauma.
Well, I'll be damned. Doesn't that explain a few things