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Curse of the Blumenthals [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 384 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x140x25 mm, kaal: 347 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Post Hill Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798895654316
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 384 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x140x25 mm, kaal: 347 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Post Hill Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798895654316
Teised raamatud teemal:
Over three generations of whispered secrets, crime, and lies in a Jewish-American family.

“Journalist Karas blends memoir and true crime in this intriguing family history. Along the way, she nimbly balances the disclosure of scandalous family secrets with a prevailing sense of empathy. It’s a bruising portrait of generational trauma.”
Publisher’s Weekly

The Blumenthals are one of millions of Eastern European Jewish families who immigrated to the United States at the end of the nineteenth century. Settling in Providence, Rhode Island, they grow and prosper. During Prohibition, the Blumenthals become bootleggers—starting their fraught history with alcohol and crime. Once Prohibition is repealed, Barney Blumenthal opens a liquor store in Boston. Life is good—until fate intervenes.

In May 1935, a drunk driver takes the lives of six Blumenthals, including three children. Horrific photos run in newspapers across the country. Six months later, Ronnie Blumenthal is born: a phoenix rising from the ashes of devastation, a golden child upon whose blond head the family’s hopes and dreams are placed. He grows into a handsome and spoiled teenager, driving a fast convertible and surrounded by beautiful girls. The Blumenthal legacy is resurrected—until one July night in 1954, when he is arrested for murder.

The victim is his mother’s seamstress, who was allegedly having an affair with his father. Newspaper and TV coverage is relentless. Ronnie pleads guilty, yet dark questions remain unanswered. Upon Ronnie’s release from prison, his drunken behavior causes the family—who faithfully visited him behind bars—to finally wash their hands of him. At the end of his life, not one family member will contribute to his funeral. The once golden child is buried in a pauper’s grave, etching the Blumenthal curse in stone.

A decade later, New York Times bestselling author Phyllis Karas, a Blumenthal cousin, uses her well-honed instincts as a journalist to peel back layers of long-hidden family secrets. Karas sensitively chronicles the generational trauma affecting Phillip and Rose Blumenthal’s six children and their children—the fifteen Blumenthal cousins—who were left to build their lives in the fallout. The Blumenthals’ story proves that, by learning from the past with care and love, curses can be broken.

Arvustused

A tragic car accident, a mistress's murder and a long reckoning with intergenerational traumathese are the sorts of crises Tolstoy must have meant when he wrote each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. And yet, through compassionately dogged reporting, Phyllis Karas, a Blumenthal cousin herself shows how with love, patience and time, family curses can be, if not broken, at least absorbed. -- Michael Kimmel, author of Playmakers: The Jewish Entrepreneurs Who Created the Toy Industry in America In fiction, curses are supernatural punishment from a sorcerer. In real life, curses are more akin to serious bad luck, the kind of misfortune that, when familial, can tear a clan apart. Phyllis Karass Curse of the Blumenthals is the uplifting story of a family that mightve splintered but persevered due to the cohesiveness of faith and love. Part genealogy, part family scrapbook, part true-crime reporting, this fascinating memoir is a near-obsessive examination of just how meticulous the agonies of chaos must become before one suspects the cards of fate are stacked.  -- Michael Benson, author of Gangsters vs. Nazis Whether we like it or not, family forms the fabric of every human being. In Curse of the Blumenthals, an honest and meticulously researched account of the author's family, Phyllis Karas reveals how two tragedies, nineteen years apart, can have reverberations decades later. This is a story of how an American family can carry sorrow, resilience, and ultimately triumph in the face of tragedy. -- Shirley Russak Wachtel, author of The Baker of Lost Memories and A Castle in Brooklyn

Phyllis Karas, the author of a dozen books, taught journalism at Boston University and was a stringer for People magazine. She is the co-author, alongside Kevin Weeks, of the New York Times bestseller Brutal: The Untold Story of My Life Inside Whitey Bulgers Irish Mob. She co-authored, with Kiki Feroudi Moutsatsos, The Onassis Women: An Eyewitness Account, the subject of a Dateline NBC special. An award-winning journalist, her work has appeared in Vogue, the Miami Herald, the Boston Globe, and Boston Magazine among others, and she wrote a popular column, Wit, Wisdom and Woe, for the Boston Herald.

An alumna of Boston University and George Washington University, Karas and her husband, Jack, a retired physician, are longtime residents of Marblehead, Massachusetts. She has two sons and three grandchildren.