Saturday, January 21, 2017

The Invisble Wall




"The Invisble Wall: A Love Story That Broke Barriers" is a memoir by Harry Bernstein begins somewhat reminiscent of Angela's Ashes, but soon takes on a voice and heart of its own.
The title is a reference to the invisible "line in the sand" drawn straight down the middle of the street dividing two different cultures and religions forced to cohibitate the same smallcorner, miserable corner of England during the 1900s, Jews on one side and Christians on the other.
It is Harry's memories of growing up with a despot father who cares more for the bottle than he does for his family and a caring, devoted mother at her wits end who determination and dreams become the powerful yet crumbled foundation of her family.
The story also mostly centers around the taboo blossoming loves that are tossed about on the eve of WW I with all of the heartbreak of living in a poverty stricken world of child labour and religious persecution.
I found this memoir, written by the author at age 93, to be engaging and positively charming in execution. It was a well written taken of the power of love to break down all walls, whether real or invisible.
I give it 4 out of 5 stars for anyone who loves reading about small English working-class neighborhoods and World War I novels.

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