Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 06/2024
  • 979-8886650105 B0D648342P
  • 148 pages
  • $13.00
Hardcover Details
  • 06/2024
  • 979-8886650112 B0D64F1TBD
  • 148 pages
  • $20.00
Rainy River Girl
What will happen when a little Jewish girl heads off with her parents to a small rural town in 1930's Ontario Canada, while being the only Jewish family in town? This entertaining memoir provides the answers. Follow Toby Gershfield in her adventures as she is challenged by scary sights and sounds, frightening dreams, prickly situations, and friends who keep disappearing. She also devises unique strategies to only do the things that she wants in ways that only a little girl can. In the midst of all this, she finds her way, and grows into a young Jewish woman whose views of herself and the world are widened. Anyone who enjoys reading about the way things used to be in North America in the early 20th century, before the advent of television, cell phones and the Internet, will be delighted by this book. Over a dozen pencil drawings by James N Gershfield are included.
Reviews
The Gershfields’ candid memoir centers on 90-year-old Toby Gershfield’s quaint childhood in the 1930s and ‘40s as a young girl in rural Rainy River, Ontario, where her family was the only Jewish family in town. After leaving Lithuania “soon after the Pogroms in the early 1900’s,” Toby’s grandparents and parents settled in Winnipeg, Manitoba, dubbed “the Jerusalem of Canada” due to its thriving Jewish community. There, Toby’s grandfather grew to be a prominent rabbi in the city and nation as a whole. Toby’s father, meanwhile, sought a position as a dentist in Winnipeg, but none were available, so he had to search further afield.

Further afield led him to Rainy River, a town of 1,000 residents that existed to serve the railroad and railroad workers who passed through on a cross-country train. As the only Jewish family there, the Helmans could not access Kosher foods and supplies, synagogues, or Jewish community in general; such was their isolation that when a circus came into town with a Jewish owner, they invited him over for dinner just to spend time with someone familiar with the culture. Despite the challenges, the Helmans made a home there, and Toby learned that she was “able to remain true to my Jewish roots in spite of living in a non-Jewish world.”

Some rough pencil sketches punctuate the Gershfields’ memoir, suggesting the drawings elementary-school Toby might have made in 1940. Her volume of recollections, co-written with her son James, is idyllic, nostalgic, and illuminating of its time and place, capturing the texture of life as it was lived and a family and community as they held firm to themselves and flourished. Striking details abound: about winters with only a wood-burning stove for heat, about studying Torah in girls-only classes in Winnipeg; the surprise terror of first spotting the Northern Lights on a Halloween night in Rainy River. The memories are connected by theme more than narrative structure, but readers fascinated by the milieu will find welcome additions to the historical record.

Takeaway: Slice-of-life memoir of a Jewish upbringing in rural Ontario in the 1930s

Comparable Titles: Helen Wald­stein Wilkes’s Letters From the Lost, Allen Levine’s Seeking the Fabled City.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: B
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

LaVonne Misner, Author of The Pig Farmer's Wife and No More Mondays - a nautical

Rainy River Girl offers a breath of fresh air, depicting the values of goodness, dignity, and innocence from the previous century. This inspirational story is in the form of short vignettes, as related by Toby to her son James.

Marci Rosenthal, Author of Her Name Was Sally

Imagine if Farley Mowat's mother had had gefilte fish swimming in her bathtub instead of owls on her shoulder while she baked cakes. This is what makes Rainy River Girl so special. The sole Jewish family in a remote town 150 miles from Winnipeg were clueless when it came to the Canadian wilderness. They knew nothing about raising pets or encountering wild animals, but they made a life for several years in this harsh but beautiful environment. Toby Gershfield's recollections of her childhood are remarkably vivid and she makes it clear why they are worth returning to - both for herself and the reader.

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 06/2024
  • 979-8886650105 B0D648342P
  • 148 pages
  • $13.00
Hardcover Details
  • 06/2024
  • 979-8886650112 B0D64F1TBD
  • 148 pages
  • $20.00
ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...