Picture of author.

Yael Shahar

Author of Returning

2 Works 28 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Photo by Rahel Jaskow

Works by Yael Shahar

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Country (for map)
Israel
Places of residence
Israel
Short biography
Yael Shahar was born in the U.S., but followed her dreams to Israel as a teenager. Since then, she has spent most of her career working in counter-terrorism and intelligence, with brief forays into teaching physics and astronomy. She now divides her time between researching trends in terrorism and learning Talmud with anyone who will sit still long enough.

Members

Reviews

It’s hard to write a concise review of this book. The subject is crucial to read about, but there is a lot of pain in this story about the Holocaust and the belief/realization that some souls do return to the world after having been through such horror.
There are other books that support this claim, from people having recurring dreams about living through the Shoah, to explanations from well-know Torah scholars and Rabbis that support these occurrences.
This is an important book for anyone who needs to truly understand what it meant to live through this period.… (more)
 
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schoenbc70 | 12 other reviews | Sep 2, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Returning by Yael Shahar is a powerful, emotional memoir. This book will stay with you after you have read the last pages of the book. This book will make you think and question. I highly recommend.
 
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Loveuga | 12 other reviews | Jun 19, 2019 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is an unusual memoir to say the least. The first half switches back and forth between Alex (written in first person) and Yael (written in third person). Alex is recounting his tale of having been imprisoned in the Nazi concentration camp of Birkenau. Alex is deeply troubled about his time spent in the camp and the things he had to do to survive. His memories are painful and he feels much guilt about some of the things he had to do to survive, mainly working in the crematorium leading down the weary and frightened Jews to their deaths, then collecting the dead bodies and feeding them into the fires. Yael is plagued with intrusive thoughts about a time in which she could not possibly have experienced. Memories of being held in a concentration camp, filled with fear and pain. Alex begins correspondence with a rabbi in order to sort through his feelings and emotions surrounding his time at Birkenau and submit to a final judgement on this actions within the camp/ He is wracked with guilt and knows that while it will be hard, it is the only way to achieve peace in his soul.

This emotional memoir really hooked me for the beginning half. The journey back in time as Alex relives his time at a German concentration camp is heartbreaking. It was descriptive and vivid and I found myself needing breaks in between especially disturbing passages, it was a lot to digest.

I was really not as invested in the story of Yael and her journey of self discovery, and when the two characters story lines came together it was shocking and not anything remotely close to what I had been anticipating. The second half of the book dragged quite a bit to me; it was very repetitive and clinical with reading of sacred texts and discussing at length and in multitude, Alexs actions in the concentration camp.

Overall it was a very different sort of memoir (no spoilers but trust me on this one) one that I really am not sure was my cup of tea. Had it been wrapped up shortly after that halfway point twist, I think it would have been a much more enjoyable read.
… (more)
 
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courtneygiraldo | 12 other reviews | Feb 3, 2019 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I liked it. Probably wouldn't read again for a while.
 
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dreamer66 | 12 other reviews | Jan 27, 2019 |

Statistics

Works
2
Members
28
Popularity
#471,397
Rating
4.2
Reviews
13
ISBNs
4