One in Six Million: The Baby by the Roadside and the Man who retraced a Holocaust Survivor's Lost Identity. The title seems to tell it all, and yet there is so much more to this story. This is a story that is readable and accessible, a story worth reading.
A good portion of the first half of the book is Stanley Diamond's (the genealogist) own journey. Mundane and random life events come together to paint a portrait of Stanley, a man who was compelled to search for Maria's birth family. Perseverance and luck= Stanley Diamond.
Immensely personal but told in a relatable way, many individual stories come together to tell one much larger story. How all these events, some of them coincidences, join together: Amy Fish's present day personal life, Stanley Diamond with his interest in genealogy, and Maria with her yearning to learn from where she originated. What a great legacy this book is, this collection of history from multiple families, the joy meshed with the tragic, strangers joined by events out of their control.
What I thought was a book about the baby found by the side of the road was actually a story of how people are connected through blood, experiences, and happenstance. I loved the storytelling, there was a light touch to the more horrific events, and ultimately this was a riveting and important story.
As for Stanley Diamond, responsible for the creation of JRI-Poland, an archive of information accumulated by volunteers and archivists, it is incredible what one man set into motion, life changing for many people. And Uncle Avi and Aunt Dora, what absolute gems.