Brief Hours and Weeks is the author's account of growing up in a small, tightly knit, first-generation Polish-Jewish community in Cape Town in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s.
Observing through at first naive and then later more sophisticated eyes, he describes his childhood and youth in a protective off-the-boat immigrant Jewish family in very British-Commonwealth South Africa as apartheid becomes increasingly coercive.
Through vivid and candid personal stories, he brings to life a time, place, culture, people, and set of mores that no longer exist. At 21, he leaves Africa to study in America.
"What a delight. It succeeds in writerly craft, narrative, evocation of people, times and places and-not least-in authorial courage and candor."
-James Grant,
author of Bagehot: The Life and Times of the Greatest Victorian
"This is a touching, evocative (and beautifully illustrated) memoir, a vibrant portrayal of a vanished yet not wholly distant world. Emanuel Derman paints a convincing picture with great skill, candour and humanity. These are precious memories, which you will enjoy reading."
-Stefan Stern,
former Financial Times columnist and author
"Professor Derman writes with such honesty, openness and detail that I feel I may have developed false memories. 'But, Paul, you aren't Jewish and you've never been to Cape Town.' Now I'm not so sure."
-Paul Wilmott, mathematician, author and semi-professional controversialist