“Bubbeleh, let me tell you about when I was your age”.
Author Bess Kalb channels the voice of her bubbe throughout this charming novel.
“Grandma, (Bobby Bell), talked about herself as a little girl in a town called Pinsk in Belarus. It was the 1880’s, after the first pogrom, when the tsar sent his marauders into the shtetls to drag Jewish patriarchs our of their homes and shoot them in the streets, while their neighbors cowered with their Gaza’s lamps off, awaiting the safe fate. she told me how after they killed the fathers, they’d arrested the sons on made up charges and sent them to march in the front lines of the tsar’s army. Cannon fodder. Then they’d raped the daughters and left the mothers beaten and babbling and afraid of the night, waiting for the clomping of the horses’ hooves I can’t stop the cobblestones again”.
“That’s how it was and that’s how it is, and that’s how it always was, that’s how
it always will be, Barbara, she said. Every hundred years they find a new reason to hunt the Jews”.
Bessie, a nice Jewish girl, was dating a guy she met at Brown University. Charlie ‘wasn’t Jewish.
He was a goyium.
Grandma would prefer her granddaughter marry a Jew- not a Christian whose family sent him to a boarding school high school.
But..... since the Brown University boyfriend majored in business - Grandma gave her blessings.
“Phone Call, 2009
GRANDDAUGHTER:
Grandma, I’m going to Maine for Christmas to meet Charlie’s family.
GRANDMOTHER: To Maine?
That’s where he grew up.
I thought you said he went to boarding school.
Right. Yes. But his family lives in Maine.
Well, they kicked him out.
They didn’t kick him out! It’s just how they do things. His whole family went to that boarding school.
Mm-hmmm.
What?!
In this family, we don’t send our children away.
It wasn’t like that at all!
Bessie?
What, Grandma?
You will not send your children there no matter what Charlie says. There are plenty of good schools where you don’t have to abandon your child.
Grandma, we’ve only been dating for three months.
I know.
We don’t even live together.
You will.
I don’t know that.
I do.
Oh really? How do you know?
Because it’s the middle of December and you’re going to Maine”.
Another funny?
“People didn’t talk about their journey, Bessie. There wasn’t any ‘sharing’ between parents and their children”.
Voice Mail, April 3, 2011
“Bessie, if you ever finally find a lipstick that actually, certifiably looks good on you, buy twenty of them. If it gets discontinued— and it always does— you’ll never forgive yourself. Ever. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.
[BEAT] Do they have a Bloomingdale’s in San Francisco? Is it very small?”
July 2012
GRANDDAUGHTER: Bessie, you sound like you’re crying. Oh my god—
“No, it’s good. I got it. I got the job. The Jimmy Kimmel job”.
WOW.... I had no idea who Bess Kalb - (a writer for the Jimmy Kimmel show), was, until I read the above quote.
This book is ADORABLE. funny, warm, touching, bittersweet, filled with past stories that grandma shared with her granddaughter, Bessie.
It’s written with so much love & charm, I could hardly stand it!!!!
“Nobody Will Tell You This But Me”, takes about two hours tops to read ( longer if you read the funnies to your ‘go-shelter’ guy- as I did to Paul)
Grandma Bobby, and Bessie are two easy people to love.
A wonderful family memoir!
Happy Easter and/ or Passover to those who celebrate.
This book allowed me to feel connected with my Jewish roots —while self-separating from family and friends.
Plus....
it felt so good to ‘laugh’.