I write letters to the editor of The New York Times but only occasionally are they accepted. This one was not but I remain fascinated by the book at the heart of my letter:
To the editor of the New York Times Book Review,
In his review of Ian Buruma’s book, Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945, Kevin Peraino says he wishes the author had “delved deeper.”
I don’t doubt him but if Buruma manages to convey even a bit of the uncanny experience of surviving World War II, especially in Germany, that will satisfy me.
I’ve heard about the war and ‘the Greatest Generation’ my whole life, but stupidly ignored its importance until I began translating the work of a Holocaust survivor (Edith Bruck).
Her story is fairly typical but no less compelling because of that: At age 13, she was deported from her native Hungary by the Nazis, and, as she would write later, “lost everyone and everything.” After I translated that line, I decided I needed to permanently study the Holocaust and by extension World War II.
I’m not related to anyone who fought in combat but still the era
not only witnessed the greatest atrocity of the modern age but also shaped my
parents, born just before the war, and continued to influence the world I was
born into, three decades after the fighting stopped. I’ll never know enough so
I keep reading, and Buruma’s book now goes on the to-be-read pile.
Regards,
Jeanne Bonner











