Do you remember your favorite book from childhood?

Heck yes I do. “Doroga uhodit v dal”, aka “The road goes into the distance” by Alexandra Brushtein was the quintessential coming of age story of a Jewish girl at the turn of the 20th century in Czarist Russia. It was a memoir of the author’s growing up and experiencing antisemitism, growth of communism and social class frictions that increasingly led to violence in pre revolution Russia. This book was a childhood favorite of my mom’s which is how a copy ended up in our home library. .

I loved this book so much that when it was accidentally given away to the local Catholic Church (the irony of that does not escape me) when we were packing for immigration, I threw such a monumental fit that my dad went and got the book back. And now it sits on my shelf in my own family library stamped with logo of the Kostyol of Saint Florian of Shargorod.

Even though I rarely read it, it’s yet another link to my childhood and memories of my connection with my mama.

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Filed under Interesting Jewish books, Jewish topics for perusal and learning, Personal Reflections

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  1. Oh gosh…what an intriguing and bittersweet book for a child. (Glad you got it back!) Mine at 5 years old was “Caps for Sale.”

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