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Title details for Melting Point by Rachel Cockerell - Wait list

Melting Point

Family, Memory, and the Search for a Promised Land

ebook
Pre-release: Expected May 6, 2025
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available

Longlisted for the 2024 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction
A New York Times Most Anticipated Book
This dazzling, innovative family memoir tells the story of a long-lost plan to create a Jewish state in Texas.
On June 7, 1907, a ship packed with Russian Jews sets sail not to Jerusalem or New York, as many on board have dreamed, but to Texas. The man who persuades the passengers to go is David Jochelmann, Rachel Cockerell's great-grandfather. The journey marks the beginning of the Galveston Movement, a forgotten moment in history when ten thousand Jews fled to Texas in the leadup to World War I.
The charismatic leader of the movement is Jochelmann's closest friend, Israel Zangwill, whose novels have made him famous across Europe and America. As Eastern Europe becomes infected by antisemitic violence, Zangwill embarks on a desperate search for a temporary homeland—from Australia to Canada, Angola to Antarctica—before reluctantly settling on Galveston. He fears the Jewish people will be absorbed into the great American melting pot, but there is no other hope.
In a highly inventive style, Cockerell captures history as it unfolds, weaving together letters, diaries, memoirs, newspaper articles, and interviews into a vivid account. Melting Point follows Zangwill and the Jochelmann family through two world wars, to London, New York, and Jerusalem—as their lives intertwine with some of the most memorable figures of the twentieth century, and each chooses whether to cling to their history or melt into their new surroundings. It is a story that asks what it means to belong, and what can be salvaged from the past.

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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2025
      Multivocal history, focusing on the author's family, of the European Jewish diaspora. Part of Cockerell's family arrived in London from Ukraine when World War I broke out, and for her great-grandfather, in some ways, "his pre-war existence belonged to a lost world." That existence included work in the highest reaches of Theodor Herzl's original Zionist movement, which sought a homeland in an unfriendly world. With Herzl and, importantly, the largely forgotten intellectual and writer Israel Zangwill, David Jochelmann sought that homeland across the globe, including by means of the so-called Galveston Plan, where 10,000 Jews arrived in the U.S. by way of the Texas port, "sent there from Russia by my great-grandfather." With a narrative whose voices are drawn from a vast range of published sources--books, letters, newspaper and journal articles--Cockerell gives shape to Jochelmann, perhaps the least known of the Zionist leaders. Along the way she looks at the slow elaboration of what would become the Jewish nation: at one point Palestine, which theNew York Sun called "smaller than the State of New Jersey," and later, in a misbegotten episode, British East Africa, "one of the few sections of Africa where white men may thrive," which led to a rebellion against Herzl by many followers, intent on settling in Palestine instead. For many, the destination proved to be New York City, with theTribune opining, "Few outside the Jewish world appreciate the vast difficulties involved in the Americanization of the Russian Hebrew," while the financier Jacob Schiff urged that "the Jew of the future is, to my mind, the Russian Jew transformed by American methods." Jochelmann himself (losing the second "n" after arriving) went to London, helping organize anti-Nazi resistance but dying before the horrors of the Holocaust became known, and before the independent Jewish state he envisioned took shape. An innovative, rewarding contribution to Jewish history.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


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