Friday, September 22, 2023

#BookReview: Summons to Berlin by @JoanneIntrator @shewritespress






Synopsis: On his deathbed, Dr. Joanne Intrator’s father poses two unsettling 

“Are you tough enough? Do they know who you are?”

Joanne soon realizes that these haunting questions relate to a center-city Berlin building at 16 Wallstrasse that the Nazis ripped away from her family in 1938. But a decade is to pass before she will fully come to grasp why her father threw down the gauntlet as he did.

Repeatedly, Joanne’s restitution quest brings her into confrontation with yet another of her profound fears surrounding Germany and the Holocaust. Having to call on reserves of strength she’s unsure she possesses, the author leans into her professional command of psychiatry, often overcoming flabbergasting obstacles perniciously dumped in her path.

The depth and lucidity of psychological insight threaded throughout Summons to Berlin makes it an attention-grabbing standout among books on like topics. As a reader, you’ll come away delighted to know just who Dr. Joanne Intrator is. You’ll also finish the book cheering for her, because in the end, she proves far more than tough enough to satisfy her father’s unnerving final demands.



Goodreads
Amazon

Rating: 4 Stars
My Review: For some reason WWII holds a special spot in my heart. I watch movies and documentaries of it all the time.  The events that these people went through and survived is beyond incredible and devastating. This book of an account of this woman's father and his survival was breathtaking and inspiring.  I could not put it down once I picked it up. 










Review

“. . . Intrator debuts with a passionate memoir. . . a unique and memorable account of untangling inherited trauma.” 
Publishers Weekly

“When one person spends years fighting for justice against entrenched evil, maddening bureaucracy, and all but insurmountable odds, it makes for a riveting story. When the story is true, it becomes genuinely inspiring. The ‘summons to Berlin’ came from countless victims of Nazi rule, as well as from a demand from history for justice . . . and Joanne Intrator answered that summons with rare resilience and courage. You will find yourself agonizing over her setbacks, cheering her victories.”
—Jeff Greenfield, award-winning television journalist and author

“Joanne Intrator has created a nonfiction book that reads like a well-scripted novel. But what makes this book so extraordinary is that the author takes a rather mundane topic—seeking the return of a building that was stolen by the Nazis—and uses it to enlighten the reader about how people (and their organizations) actually behave, and what motivates them to act in ways that many would describe as sociopathic. Telling the story as a psychiatrist—one whose ability to analyze conduct and demeanor is truly unique—sets this book apart from all other ‘restitution’ narratives.” 
—David Hirshberg, author of Jacobo’s Rainbow and My Mother’s Son

“Dr. Intrator’s 
Summons to Berlin is unique in that it is laced through with her observations and insights as a well trained and experienced psychiatrist about the experiences she endured in her pursuit of justice for her family. I couldn’t put the book down . . . In fact, I opened this book late one afternoon and read without stopping for five hours, mesmerized by the shocking details of Dr. Intrator’s experience. I was astonished by her unflagging perseverance in solving the inevitable and novel obstacles put in her way . . . remarkable.”
—Dr. Marianne J. Legato, best-selling author of Why Men Never Remember and Women Never Forget

“Joanne Intrator’s 
Summons to Berlin is an important and engrossing book. Spurred by unsettling deathbed questions, the writer restlessly searches for answers in order that her father, Gerhard, should one day rest easy. This memoir reads with intense imagery that is really the stuff of novels. I had to keep reminding myself that the entire narrative is all too real. A remarkable accomplishment that fully honors Intrator’s family legacy while stimulating readers’ minds and touching their hearts as well.”
—Steven K. Baum, author of Antisemitism Explained and The Psychology of Genocide

“In her captivating 
Summons to Berlin, Joanne Intrator skillfully interweaves an immense knowledge of Holocaust-era history into a vivid, complex, tragic narration of the restitution conflict that for many years possessed her heart and soul. A triumph!”
—Dr. Ava Siegler, author of What Should I Tell the Kids?

“Joanne Intrator’s 
Summons to Berlin is a compelling confession full of intriguing questions and significant insights. In this absorbing book, the author is at once personal and objective, bringing together inner and outer realities in thoughtful, searching ways. Intrator rewards readers with a vivid feel for the complex, often disturbing events at the heart of her narrative.” 
—Dr. Michael Eigen, author of The Sensitive Self and The Psychoanalytic Mystic

“Joanne Intrator’s 
Summons to Berlin is a gripping story of loss and the struggle for restitution.” 
—William H. Weitzer, PhD, John H. Slade Executive Director, Leo Baeck Institute

“With her 
Summons to Berlin, Joanne Intrator provides readers with rich, vibrant details of Mitte history that they simply will not find anywhere else. I hope and believe that Intrator’s finely observed memoir, with its dramatic central conflict and upbeat ending, will make a significant contribution to continued good relations between Germany and the United States.” 
—Dr. Benedikt Goebel, Director, Office for City Research, Berlin, Büro für Stadtforschung

“What really strikes me about Joanne Intrator’s remarkable 
Summons to Berlin is how compellingly the author—a practicing psychiatrist—decodes the emotional dimensions of her epic restitution drama. This stimulating, deeply moving book is sure to resonate.” 
—Dr. Frank Mecklenburg, Director of Research and Chief Archivist, Leo Baeck Institute

“Throughout her inspiring memoir 
Summons to Berlin, Dr. Joanne Intrator writes with her sharp, inquiring mind. Because she is a practicing psychiatrist and accomplished researcher, she is able to imbue her narrative with unique insights not just of the people involved in her case but also more broadly of history and its puzzlements. I find this book an exceptionally enriching read.”
—Elisabeth von Haebler, editor-in-chief of Ästhetik & Kommunikation

“What a harrowing, powerful read. The author, a psychiatrist, brings accessible professional insights to this memoir . . . In chilling detail, she recounts every step of her brave, and often frustrating, yet ultimately successful mission. On his deathbed, Dr. Intrator’s father had asked whether she was “tough enough” for this kind of complex, prolonged battle. 
Summons to Berlin leaves no doubt that she is.”
—Peggy Taylor, Photographer, author of Streeteries: New York’s Pandemic Outdoor Dining
--This text refers to the paperback edition.

About the Author

Joanne Intrator’s life has been shaped by being the daughter of German Jewish refugees. From childhood, she pondered why people perpetrate atrocities on their fellow human beings. After studying German history at Connecticut College, she received an MD from Columbia University and became a psychiatrist with an expertise in abnormal behavior. She spearheaded the first brain imaging research on well-characterized psychopaths, which was published in the Journal of Biological Psychiatry. Following her father’s death in 1993, she took it upon herself to fight for restitution of a building in Berlin; her professional insights into the behavior of bureaucrats were critical to her understanding of how to negotiate with obstructionists. Her journey has been the subject of news articles, television interviews, and museum exhibits. Joanne practices psychiatry in New York City and writes a blog on psychopathy for Psychology Today. For more, see her website, JoanneIntrator.com. --This text refers to the paperback edition.









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