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Forgetting Fathers: Untold Stories from an Orphaned Past

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An eloquent personal reflection on the fascination of family history and the desire to both discover and escape origins.

In Forgetting Fathers , David Marshall weaves together the stories of his grandfather and great-grandfather with his own quest to solve the mystery of his family's past. Beginning as a search for his lost family name, Marshall attempts to understand the origins of his grandfather, who spent part of his childhood in the Hebrew Orphan Asylum of the City of New York. He also reconstructs the life and death of his great-grandfather, a Russian immigrant tailor who died at age thirty-six in a private sanitarium dedicated to the treatment of mental and nervous diseases. The narrative becomes a detective story that reflects on our ambivalence about origins, the relation between history and mourning, and the compulsion to search for life stories. Forgetting Fathers combines historical accounts based on records, reports, and public documents with autobiographical reflections and speculations. Included throughout are photographs, newspaper clippings, and facsimiles of original documents that provide a sense of both the texture of the times and the fabric of archival and genealogical research.

"One of our most gifted literary scholars, David Marshall in Forgetting Fathers has written an un- forgettable detective story born in a deeply felt, personal quest to solve the mystery of his grandfather's name. The result is not only an absorbing read; it is a profound testament to the human impulse to know who we are and from whence we came. For Marshall, that secret was locked a century ago in the Hebrew Orphan Asylum of the City of New York, and in his odyssey to find-and turn-the key, Marshall becomes the living proof of Eudora Welty's timeless line, 'Remembering is done through the blood.'" — Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University

" Forgetting Fathers is a truly remarkable piece of work. The pertinacity of Marshall as a reader, as a critic, as a theorist, impels him on his quest to learn all that he can about his past. The book is riveting." Jonathan Freedman, coeditor of Jewish in America

"From the Hebrew Orphan Asylum to the history of New York tailors, David Marshall weaves his Jewish family memoir with gripping details. An enlightening contribution to the growing body of research on the lives and institutions of twentieth- century Jewish immigrants." — Mikhal Dekel, author of The Universal Masculinity, Modernity, and the Zionist Moment

346 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 2015

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David Marshall

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8 reviews
April 13, 2016
I loved this book, of course I'm a family historian and genealogist so what's not to like about it. Seriously though it's a great read. David Marshall weaves his tale well and supplies all the details of his journey. This material could be dry and boring but not the way Mr. Marshall tells it. He has done extensive research and he places fascinating historic moments and newspaper accounts into the story, even researching information on the census taker! Perhaps another reason I enjoyed this so much is that my parents and grandparents started out in the tenements of New York City, my grandmother did piece work for the garment trade and my relatives lived in the same neighborhood as David Marshall's family during the same time period. The author draws a picture of life in New York City in the early 1900's that feels real. So, if you love a good genealogy story or a good accounting of history or just a well told story, you'll love this one.
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