By Haim Gouri
Introduction by Alan Mintz
Translated by Michael Swirsky
Paper - 9780814330876
Price: $25.95s
Subjects: Jewish Studies: Holocaust Studies
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Published by Wayne State University Press
"Facing the Glass Booth is a superb translation from the original Hebrew account by Haim Gouri containing the sensitive and profound insights and observations of a journalist/poet who attended the drama unfolding in Jerusalem in April, 1961 as a reporter for the newspaper Lamerhav. Gouri’s reportage-cúm-literary work provides a fascinating account of unimaginable evil as well as extraordinary epic of survival that lays bare the physical and emotional scars of the victims and the painful self reproach of many survivors."
— Jewish Book World
“The publication of Haim Gouri’s Facing the Glass Booth is long overdue. This book is an eloquent and compassionate work of journalism, history and literature. It’s a unique achievement in Holocaust writing. Not until Gouri’s courtroom reporting did the young nation of Israel come to grips with the horrors of World War II. It found the voice to articulate and to chronicle the physical and emotional pain as well as the shame of survivors. Gouri’s narrative must be read and re-read in every home, in every generation. Gouri the poet is also Gouri the historian and teacher.”
— Steven T. Katz, professor of Religion and director of the Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University