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“Izzy’s Fire is filled with the passion of one woman determined
to do justice to the story of another woman who lived in hiding
throughout the war years. The war has soul. One feels the
intensity of the struggle to survive. One senses the decency of
those who were ready to rescue and the evil that haunted a
mother and father and their young child in the dangerous world
they lived.
Nancy Wright Beasley has told a powerful story with dignified
restraint. She has given voice to an underreported side of the
Holocaust – life in hiding.”
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Michael Berenbaum, Project Director of the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum (1988-1993): Author of the
The World
Must Know: The History of the Holocaust as told in the United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum. |
~~~~~
“Overall, Izzy’s Fire is an accessible and outstanding piece of Holocaust literature.”
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Martin Goldman
Director of Survivor Affairs, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
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"...A fascinating account
of a few Jewish families that escaped the horrors of the Ghetto
in Kovno and by some miracle survived the war years in one of
the most hostile environments to Jews on the European continent.
It is a document of unlimited courage and devotion, of boundless
hope and passion to survive...It is also an account of the very
rare occasions when decent Lithuanian people were willing to
provide shelter to the escapees at risk to their lives. This
book is another very important addition to the history of the
Holocaust."
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Abe Larwe, editor-English
section of Gachelet,
a publication of the Association of Lithuanian Jews in
Israel |
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“Nancy is a passionate, dedicated writer who has written a
searing story, sure to capture readers with Izzy’s Fire. She
proves herself to be a story teller who uses firsthand accounts
and research with equal resolve.”
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Adriana Trigiani, Author of the Big Stone Gap trilogy |
~~~~~
“…Through her [Eta Ipp] eyes, we see
her stepfather mouthing advice as he’s driven off on the back of
a truck to his death; through her ears we hear her uncle and
husband describe slave labor as well as resistance efforts;
through her senses we learn what it feels like to share an
underground space 9 by 12 by 4 with a dozen other people, all
the while wishing she were somewhere else, and occasionally that
they were someone else. The reader cannot help but sympathize
with her as she shares her regrets at the loss of friends and
family, her dread in the face of what Hannah Arendt calls ‘the
banality of evil.’
…Because of the nature of what they
describe, Holocaust accounts do not make easy reading. As the
generation of eyewitness ages, the effort to capture their
stories on tape, in print, in photos and video, continues.
Izzy’s Fire is part of that effort, to ensure future
generations may learn and remember.”
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Judi Goldenberg, Richmond
Times-Dispatch |
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"Izzy's Fire" is a moving story of unbelievable hardships
about a Jewish Lithuanian family's struggles and how finding
refuge with a poor Catholic farm family was key to their
survival. It's a beautifully told story that weaves the
importance of Jewish traditions with the atrocities of the
Holocaust, while making one survivor's tale very personal."
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Ann Augherton, Managing Editor
Arlington Catholic HERALD |
~~~~~
“The author has done a masterful job of portraying a
gripping saga of one family’s courageous fight for survival
in the midst of the most horrendous event in human history.
The story plumbs the depths of horror and despair of the
Holocaust, yet, through it all, speaks strongly of hope and
faith.
“Though fully recognizing the pattern of treachery, deceit,
and betrayal that characterizes too much of human life,
Izzy’s Fire depicts an example of human caring that
bridges the deep chasm that sometimes separates Jewish and
Christian communities. As a staunch Catholic acts to protect
a Jewish family, the Ipson story tells us that human
solidarity is still possible even in the darkest moments of
human history. We’re talking the stuff of miracles
here and Nancy Wright Beasley has captured it well.”
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Tom Graves, President, Baptist Theological Seminary of Richmond;
Board of Directors, Virginia Holocaust Museum |
~~~~~
"From the first pages of Izzy’s Fire:
Finding Humanity in the Holocaust, I was enthralled... This author, one of the most powerful and genuine
storytellers I’ve ever read, has a gift--letting the voice of
the characters tell their own story.
Izzy’s Fire should be required reading in public schools
across America, not only to put a face and name to the horrors
of the evil that man can do, but to also demonstrate the
resilience of man’s ability to overcome when the odds are
stacked against him. This book brought history alive for me and
sent me running to the Virginia Holocaust Museum. It will do the
same to you."
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Rebekah L. Pierce, editor
Average Girl Magazine |
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“Having known Izzy Ipson as a
congregant, this book conveys the very essence of his
character. Izzy’s Fire demonstrates the hidden miracles
that are in our lives and the ability of individuals to
persevere and maintain their integrity through very trying
circumstances. This book conveys a very positive, moral message
with good ethical teaching. It will allow students to learn
about the Holocaust through the experience of the Ipson’s
personal story. “
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Rabbi Zvi Ron
Keneseth Beth Israel (Orthodox) |
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