A Ritchie Boy A novel

Linda Stern Kass

Book - 2020

"A young Austrian Jewish man whose family has fled Europe on the eve of the Holocaust and settled in the Midwest has an unexpected experience in World War II."--Kirkus Reviews.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Published
Berkeley, CA : She Writes Press 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Linda Stern Kass (author)
Physical Description
206 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781647420079
9781631527395
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Kass's heartfelt if diffuse companion piece to her debut, Tasa's Song, is inspired by the German-speaking U.S. Army recruits who trained for intelligence operations at Camp Ritchie in Maryland during WWII. In 2016, widower Eli Stoff receives a letter addressing him as "Ritchie Boy," inviting him to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the camp's opening, where he'd trained in 1944. The letter opens a flood of memories, from his recently deceased wife, Tasa, to his early years in Austria. Kass then flashes back to 1938 Vienna, where Eli, who is Jewish, and his lifelong friend, Toby Wermer, who is not, are harassed while on a ski trip. After German troops march into Vienna, Eli's parents decide they must get their family out of the country. They settle in Columbus, Ohio, and, after the U.S. enters the war, Eli, now a college student, struggles over whether he should enlist like his friends. Two years later, he's drafted and ends up at Camp Ritchie. After Paris is liberated, Eli interrogates Nazis arrested there for impersonating Allied officers. He's particularly affected by his questioning of teenager Malcolm Schlick, who reminds him of Toby. After the war, Eli finishes college on the GI Bill and meets Tasa, a violinist and Polish immigrant. While Kass's episodic accounts are well-written, the discrete stories are disappointingly slack and don't do much to illuminate character motivation. The result is a chain of events with very little linking them together. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young Austrian Jewish man whose family has fled Europe on the eve of the Holocaust and settled in the Midwest has an unexpected experience in World War II. In the wake of the Nazi annexation of Austria, a non-Jewish Austrian immigrant to the United States seeks the help of a wealthy department store magnate--doubtless inspired by the Midwestern Jewish families who founded the likes of Kaufmann's and Lazarus--to get affidavits for her Jewish friend's family, the Stoffs, to come to America. The Stoffs' son, Eli, is a teenager when his family manages to immigrate, inadvertently leaving behind Eli's grandmother and thereby dooming her. The novel's title refers to the aspect of the story that has the potential to be the most interesting: When Eli, living with his parents in Columbus, Ohio, is drafted as an American soldier, his German-speaking background makes him eligible for a special military intelligence unit based at Camp Ritchie in Maryland. The "Ritchie Boys" are primarily recent German Jewish and Austrian Jewish immigrants and refugees who are therefore well positioned to spy on the Nazis. A compelling historical novel could certainly be written on this topic, thoughtfully probing an aspect of the Jewish American experience in World War II that has been largely unrepresented in fiction; unfortunately, this is not that novel. Only a small part of the story actually involves Eli's experience as a Ritchie Boy; the rest describes the same few dramatic aspects of his biography--the day he and his family realized they had to get out of Austria; how a beneficent American businessman saved their lives; how Eli later met his wife--over and over again. These plot elements are reiterated by continually introducing additional narrative perspectives, which despite being new are not sufficiently distinct, nor do they provide any interesting new information. The story that the novel sets out to tell is a relatively simple one, and the rest seems to be only filler--poorly written at that. A promising idea whose execution is disappointing. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.