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Stitched & Sewn: The Life-Saving Art of Holocaust Survivor Trudie Strobel

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Stitched & Sewn: The Life-Saving Art of Holocaust Survivor Trudie Strobel

Contributors:

By (Author) Jody Savin
By (photographer) Ann Elliott Cutting
Foreword by Michael Berenbaum

ISBN:

9798887980348

Publisher:

Turner Publishing Company

Imprint:

Turner Publishing Company

Publication Date:

15th July 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Needlework and fabric crafts
Biography: general
The Holocaust

Dewey:

700.45840531

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

194

Dimensions:

Width 215mm, Height 215mm

Description

A child survivor of the Holocaust, Trudie Strobel settled in California, raising a family and never discussing the horrors she witnessed. After her children grew up, the trauma of her youth caught up with her, triggering a paralyzing depression. A therapist suggested that Trudie attempt to draw the memories that haunted her, and she did--but with needle and thread instead of a pencil. Resurrecting the Yemenite stitches of her ancestors, and using the skills taught by her mother, whose master seamstress talent saved their lives in the camps, Trudie began by stitching vast tableaus of her dark and personal memories of the Holocaust. What began as therapy exploded into works of breathtaking art, from narrative tapestries of Jewish history rendered in exacting detail to portraits of remarkable likeness, and many of her works are now in public and private collections. In Stitched & Sewn, Jody Savin tells the dramatic story of how a needle and thread saved Trudie Strobel's life twice, and Ann Elliott Cutting's photographs showcase Trudie's remarkable works of art. With a foreword by Michael Berenbaum, author of eighteen books, co-founder of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and co-producer of the Academy Award-winning documentary One Survivor Remembers.

Reviews

A work of beauty: breathtaking tapestries, combined with a sensitive, poignant narrative of how art prevailed over suffering in the life and work of one survivor. Stitched & Sewn is medicine for ones eyes and heart.
David Fishman, author of The Book Smugglers and professor of history at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America

Stitched & Sewn is a testament to the profound power of the human experience; the ability to endure the worst atrocities and then create meaning and indelible beauty is a buoying, wondrous thing. That three artists from different mediawriter Jody Savin, photographer Ann Elliott Cutting, and tapestry artist Trudie Strobelcame together to realize this book reminds us that all of our life's work, including that of survival, is autobiography. You won't soon forget the stories captured here, in words and images.
Alison Singh Gee, author of Where the Peacocks Sing

Stitched & Sewn is a cautionary tale of what happens when a society loses its humanity. Trudie Strobels story reveals the emotional carnage of surviving the Holocaust and the cost of silence, and its a testament to the healing properties of art and documenting impossible pain. Strobel literally stitches together tapestries of memory and Jewish life, and in doing so implores us to face the ugliest chapters of history, and to never forget them.
Michelle Brafman, author of Washing the Dead and Bertrand Court

When there are no words, art is the storyteller, each stitch a story. Stitched & Sewn is an incredibly beautiful, haunting journey, showing the power of art to integrate us and cultivate healing.
Tina Payne Bryson, PhD, LCSW, co-author of The Whole-Brain Child and The Power of Showing Up, and the author of Bottom Line for Baby

Author Bio

Jody Savin is a graduate of Princeton University and the American Film Institute, where she earned her MFA. Following college, she worked as a playwright and poet while supporting herself as musical director for such soap operas as The Guiding Light and As the World Turns, winning three Daytime Emmy nominations. Her poetry has been published in dozens of literary magazines. As a screenwriter, Savin wrote the award-winning TNT documentary Chico Mendes: Voice of the Amazon, and she wrote, produced, and distributed the independent films Bottle Shock, Nobel Son, and CBGB. She has also written and produced feature films for Disney, Universal, Columbia, and 20th Century Fox. She lives in Pasadena, California.

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