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After her parents' death in 2000, author Joanie Holzer Schirm found
hundreds of letters held together by rusty paperclips and stamped
with censor marks, sent from Czechoslovakia, Great Britain, China,
South and North America, along with journals, vintage film, taped
interviews, and photographs. In working through the various
materials documenting Oswald "Valdik" Holzer's journey from
Czechoslovakia to China, America to Peru and Ecuador, Schirm
learned of her family history through her father's experience of
exile and loss, resiliency and hope. In this poignant, posthumous
memoir, Schirm reconstructs her father's youthful voice as he comes
of age as a Jew in interwar Prague, escapes from a Nazi-held army
unit, practices medicine in China's war-ravaged interior, and
resettles in America to start a family. Encountering a diverse cast
of characters from the humorous to the menacing, Holzer's
corresponded with family, friends, and authorities across Europe,
China, and the Americas. After the war, Holzer receives a letter
from his father "that changed everything". Written in 1942 before
his parents were transported to a Nazi death camp, the letter
begins: "My dear boy." The legacy of this remarkable piece of
correspondence is the book's culmination-a universal formula for
redemption and triumph.
"The ornately painted Chinese Boxes loomed just out of reach
throughout my childhood...but my brother and sister and I paid no
attention. The twin, red boxes were part of the
familiar-to-the-point-of-being-invisible landscape, like that big
tree outside your window with a botanical name you never learn."
Sorting through her parents belongings after their deaths, Joanie
Holzer Schirm discovered an extraordinary lost world. Hand-written
on faded and brittle stationary, stamped by censors and military
authorities, and neatly filed in those two lacquered boxes, were
400 letters from 78 correspondents-along with carbon copies of the
letters her Czech father had sent to them during World War II. "My
father never mentioned that he planned to leave a magnificent
gift," Schirm tells us, a "treasure trove" in which "I would come
across the very souls of his cousins and friends. Many of the
secrets cloistered by those bright and shiny Chinese boxes were
ghastly. Lives lost, lives shattered. Friends abandoned. Lovers
betrayed. The paths I followed beyond the letters made clear that
guilt and grief continued to wound and sometimes cripple those who
remained, long after the war was over." And yet the story that they
ultimately add up to - a story that is as emotionally absorbing as
a novel, as meticulously documented as the important work of
history that it is - not one of mere survival, but inspiration.
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