Book Review: The Invisible Wall

inv-wallAuthor:       Harry Bernstein

Publisher:    Ballantine Books/Random House

ISBN:          978-0-345-49610-2

Website:      HERE

Type:         Non-Fiction:Memoir

Pages:        321 Trade Paperback

Purchase:    $10.98 @ Amazon.com (HERE)

The Story

This is the first part of Harry Bernstein’s life story.  It starts with his earliest childhood memories in a small English mill town, just prior to World War I.  Harry lives on a street in which one side of it is occupied with Christian families while the other side houses Jewish residents.  In the middle of the street is the “invisible wall” that separates the two “communities” that all reside together on this little street.  Like many families at the time, they are faced with extreme poverty thus living a life with meals of bread and butter with tea. 

Harry’s father works at a tailor’s shop and makes meager money.  Of what he does earn, he spends most of it on drinks in a local pub.  He is a ghost of a presence in the family home and, when he is there, his presence is ominous and scary for the family members.  Harry describes his mother as the glue that held the family together and maintains enormous respect for her.  He lives with several siblings in this little home including two sisters and three brothers.  Of his siblings, he writes most about his older sister, Lily, who falls in love with a Christian boy from the opposite side of the “invisible wall.”  Their love story is tragic as Harry’s family refuses to allow her to have any type of a romantic relationship with him.  In fact, it is made known to her that if she pursues the relationship, that she will be considered dead to the family.

Admist their great poverty, lack of proper education, and sufferance of prejudice, they remain hopeful that relatives in America will eventually send them tickets for passage to America.  The readers watch the small triumphs and great misfortunes to this family with a sense of being “a fly on the wall” to this story.

The Review

73737_bernstein_harryHarry Bernstein was 96 years old when this book was  published and I believe now he is either 99 or nearing it.  He has also written a sequel to The Invisible Wall entitled The Dream which details their eventual passage to and life in America.  I am very interested in reading on to hear the outcome of their immigration and how their lives turned out.  Thankfully, at the end of this book, the reader does get an understanding of Harry’s outcome when they are able to read about his travel back to England with his beloved wife, Ruby.

I read this book immediately after reading Angela’s Ashes.  I’m not sure that this was a positive thing because the books are quite similar in nature, although completely different stories.  But, the effect of the poverty, the diet, and the alcoholic father was repetitious to the prior read so I don’t think that it gave me the same impact that it would have if I had read them months apart.  But, that’s not Harry’s fault… it was mine because I had no idea that the content of the two books were so similar.  What sets them apart?  The second half of this book (my favorite part, by the way) is focused on the tragic love story of Lily and Arthur as seen through the eyes of Harry.  How all parties dealt with this “taboo” love was riveting and thought-provoking.

I think that Harry did a lovely job with the prose of this book.  Not only was the book well written, but it kept me involved emotionally in the story.  I can’t imagine accomplishing such a tremendous dream of publishing not one, but two books, in my ninties.  That completely amazes me!  Even more remarkable is its international acclaim and the accomplishment of being a New York Times Bestseller.  After reading this book, which includes a chapter of The Dream  at the end, I have found enormous respect for Harry Bernstein and thank him for sharing his remarkable tale.    

Favorite Quotes:
 

This book had some memorable quotes that I’d love to share:

“I think of the slaughters that have taken place in the wars throughout history, the one that is being fought now in France, and I ask myself, why does God countenance all this? If God is our creator, the supreme, kind and benevolent being whom we all worship, why does he permit us to destroy one another? And why does he permit one religion to persecute another when both are his children? And so there came that terrible question – supposing, supposing it is all fantasy – is there really a God?”

“The war, it seemed, had almost completely destroyed the invisible wall that had separated us, bringing the two sides together.”

“…They’ve got us fooled with words like patriotism and duty and honor, and they’ve got us divided up into classes and religions so that each one of us figures he’s better than the other. But it’ll all change, ‘arry. Believe me, it will. People get smarter. The human brain has a potential for development. Someday it will grow big enough so that everybody will see and understand the truth, and then we won’t act like a bunch of sheep, and then that wall that separates the two sides of our street will crumble, just like the Wall of Jericho. Maybe Lily and I gave it a little push today. But one day you’ll hear a trumpet blow, and then it will be all gone. Oh yes, ‘arry, we’re going to have a better world. Things won’t always be the way they are now. I promise you, there’ll be a better world than the one we’re living in today.”

 On Sher’s “Out of Ten Scale:”

This is a book club read for me and I went into reading this book with a completely open mind.  However, like I said in the review, being on the heels of Angela’s Ashes  really made the timing of this read a little “off” for me.  It’s like watching two World War II movies in a row… you’re going to have your favorite of the two.  In addition, the second movie may not have the same impact as the first.  I still have to give this my honest opinion in my rating and for the genre Non-Fiction:Memoir, I am going to rate this book an 8.5 OUT OF 10. 

 

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12 Comments

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12 Responses

  1. Caspette

    April 22nd, 2009 at 1:21 am

    Good review. Thanks for sharing.

  2. Kathy

    April 22nd, 2009 at 5:46 am

    I really want to read this one. I’m so impressed that someone Harry’s age would embark on a projecas big as writing a book.

  3. Kathy

    April 22nd, 2009 at 5:47 am

    Sorry about the typo – that should say project as. I can’t see everything I’ve typed in your comment form.

  4. Lisamm

    April 22nd, 2009 at 6:51 am

    I’m reading this now and totally loving it, but it does remind me of Angela’s Ashes and I worried how that would go over for you since I knew you just finished AA.

    Something’s up with your comment box- it’s letting me type past the white border into the red but then I can’t see what I’m doing. Hopefully my fingers know.. LOL

  5. Darlene

    April 22nd, 2009 at 7:57 am

    Nice review. I’ve seen another review of it somewhere before and it sounded like something I’d like to read eventually.

  6. Melissa - Shhh I'm Reading

    April 22nd, 2009 at 8:30 am

    I don’t like to read 2 books together that are that similar. This is one I’d still like to read though. I can’t imagine taking on a huge project, like writing a book, at his age.

  7. Serena (Savvy Verse & Wit)

    April 22nd, 2009 at 8:53 am

    sounds like a great read!

  8. Lisamm

    April 22nd, 2009 at 10:21 am

    Testing testing testing Let’s see how this works.. I need to type far enough to go beyond the box.. OK! Looks like you have fixed the problem, whatever it was!

  9. Alyce

    April 22nd, 2009 at 10:59 am

    I sounds like it would be a good book, but I can see how it would be hard to read it right after reading Angela’s Ashes.

  10. Literary Feline

    April 22nd, 2009 at 5:31 pm

    Thank you for the great review, Sheri. I know what you mean about reading similar books back to back. Sometimes it works out well, but other times it doesn’t. This does sound like an interesting memoir. I love the title.

  11. Ladytink_534

    April 22nd, 2009 at 9:08 pm

    I read Angela’s Ashes but I honestly don’t remember very much about it. I’m glad you enjoyed this story though!

  12. DianeG

    April 22nd, 2009 at 9:45 pm

    Just a note, Sheri, I love your reviews because I believe your voice and that what you write is authentic–it’s what you believe! Just wanted to let you know because I saw your comment on Bethany’s blog post about reviews and wanted you to know that you’re blog is one of the others I enjoy visiting each day!


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