My Mother and I
Elizabeth Gertrude Stern
Read by Sue Anderson
Elizabeth Stern was two and a half years old, when her family emigrated from Poland to Pittsburgh. My Mother and I is the story of Stern's Americanization and how it ultimately alienated her from her parents. Stern's father had been a small village rabbi. Strict and traditional in his views, he sends Elizabeth to learn Hebrew at age four, so she can fulfill her destiny "as the wife of a rabbi or scholar," but he opposes letting her attend high school. Stern's mother tries fitfully to pry open doors for her daughter. When Stern's father finds Elizabeth reading a secular book, and, in a fit of rage, flings the offending novel onto the top of a tall bookcase, her mother climbs on a chair and retrieves it for her. But Stern's mother never learns English even as it becomes her daughter’s primary language--and she is burdened by endless pregnancies (she ultimately bears 11 children, only the first 4 of whom survive). Stern's relationship with her mother is loving, but when Elizabeth goes to college, they draw apart. Her mother becomes a "shadowy figure," standing with "questioning, puzzled eyes", eyes in which there is love, "but no understanding, and always an infinite loneliness." - Summary by Sue Anderson (3 hr 36 min)
Chapters
Foreward, The Kitchen | 23:24 | Read by Sue Anderson |
Playing Was Forbidden, Letters to Home | 23:50 | Read by Sue Anderson |
The American Flag, A Baby Sister | 20:29 | Read by Sue Anderson |
The Little Grey House, Little Women | 20:53 | Read by Sue Anderson |
Girls Don't Go To High School | 24:31 | Read by Sue Anderson |
A Sabbath Room | 21:55 | Read by Sue Anderson |
College and the Cost of Dowries | 19:08 | Read by Sue Anderson |
A 21st Birthday Party | 14:54 | Read by Sue Anderson |
Leaving Home | 18:33 | Read by Sue Anderson |
New York, Marriage | 16:46 | Read by Sue Anderson |
Mother Visits Her Grandson | 12:08 | Read by Sue Anderson |
Reviews
Sweet and Touching Memoir
Athena’s Grandma
Excellent Reader. A very sweet true story of growing up an immigrant in the Jewish Ghetto of New York. A young mother recounts her girlhood and her changing relationship with her own mother as she matures and becomes “Americanized”.
A good view into the life and mixed feelings of immigrants.
Allie
Sue Anderson is one of my favorite readers.
excellent story. When finished I had to call my mother.
y.baker