Member Reviews

Graphic memoir, Jewish history, family history, Sweden, Norway, WWI, WWII and Holocaust, antisemitism then & now, generational trauma

The author explores her family history, uncovering many unknown/un-passed along information and relatives.

The fine line drawings (almost look like wood stamping) are beautiful and the inclusion of family documents, newspapers and photographs really make the story come to life.

The story starts with the author reading Maus and curiosity about her own family's history. She discovers they left Russia/Poland/Lithiuania after the programs in the early 1900's to come to Sweden, where she lives now. They go into the textile and dry goods industries in Hindas, Sweden which she visits.

I loved the way she discusses how Jewish identity can look different and is different for all. She tracks down relatives in Israel, discovers the stories of family members Nazi occupied Norway, and learns about family that disappeared.


"To forget the dead would be to kill them a second time" Elie Wiesel

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Thank you to NetGalley and Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed Press for the e-ARC of Remember Us To Life!
4 / 5 ⭐

“To those who were murdered, to those who lived.”
When most people think of historical Jewish graphic novels, we think of Maus. Remember Us To Live is very different from Maus, so I want to make sure people are going in with the right mindset to the book and giving it the care it deserves. Remember Us To Life is a mixed-media deep dive into the lives (and deaths) of the author’s family. There is not a driving action packed narrative; it doesn’t have as much of the graphic, visceral violence of Maus. Remember Us is text heavy and focused on facts across all areas of life because it is meant to preserve lived experiences. Answered questions lead to more questions and to regrets. There is not a happily ever after - even the “good” news is heavy with the weight of grief and generational trauma. Things are complicated and uncertain.

This was a labor of love and research, and I would recommend it to people who enjoy memoirs and historical non fiction. It has all the trigger warnings you would expect in a book about the Shoah.

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