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Streets
Bella Spewack

Streets

a memoir of the Lower East Side

Feminist Press (Sep 1996)
9781558611535
180 pages | 14 x 230 mm | EN
$ 16.95 | Value: $ 4.08
Dewey 812/.52
LC Classification PS3537.P54 .Z475 1995
LC Control No. 95013874

Subject

  • Biography & Autobiography

Plot

"A startling, clear-eyed" memoir of an immigrant girl's childhood in early 20th century NYC from the journalist and Tony-winning co-author of Kiss Me Kate (Booklist). Born in Transylvania in 1899, Bella Spewack arrived on the streets of New York's Lower East Side when she was three. At twenty-two, while working as a reporter with her husband in Europe, she wrote a memoir of her childhood that was never published. More than seventy years later, the publication of Streets recovers a remarkable voice and offers a vivid chronicle of a lost world. Bella, who went on to a brilliant career write for stage and screen with her husband Sam, describes the sights, sounds, and characters of urban Jewish immigrant life after the turn of the century. Witty, street-smart, and unsentimental, Bella was a genuine American heroine who displays in this memoir "a triumph of will and spirit" (The Jewish Week).