
--Kirkus Reviews
"Judith Berlowitz's Home So Far Awayis like stepping into an Ernest Hemingway novel, with Kristin Hannah whispering in the reader's ear. Caught in the political strife around her, devoted to the war-injured she cares for, and struggling to surmount the betrayals of country, the powers over her, and her emerging and conflicting identities as a woman, a Jew, and a Communist, Klara Philipsborn is tossed in the storms that surround her, threatening her person and profession. This vividly told story, written as diary entries, is a captivating picture of one of the many young foreign nationals who committed their lives to this fraught time in twentieth-century Spain."
--Barbara Stark-Nemon, author of Even in Darkness and Hard Cider
"With passionate commitment and conscientious research, Judith Berlowitz shares the story of her relative, Klara Philipsborn, a German-Jewish refugee who flees to Spain and enlists in the storied Quinto Regimiento in defense of the Republic during the Spanish Civil War . . . Berlowitz tells it with a gripping intensity that will catch you up and help you to understand this era in very personal, human terms."
--Nancy Wallach, Board of Governors, ALBA, Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives
--Kirkus Reviews
". . . an emotionally compelling and historically accurate fictionalized diary . . . . Beginning in Germany in 1925 and ending in Spain in 1938, readers see the changing world through the eyes of a Jewish woman who is a self-declared communist . . . . This is an interesting and unique take on the period, and should be considered by public and academic libraries alike."
--Booklist
"Judith Berlowitz's Home So Far Awayis like stepping into an Ernest Hemingway novel, with Kristin Hannah whispering in the reader's ear. Caught in the political strife around her, devoted to the war-injured she cares for, and struggling to surmount the betrayals of country, the powers over her, and her emerging and conflicting identities as a woman, a Jew, and a Communist, Klara Philipsborn is tossed in the storms that surround her, threatening her person and profession. This vividly told story, written as diary entries, is a captivating picture of one of the many young foreign nationals who committed their lives to this fraught time in twentieth-century Spain."
--Barbara Stark-Nemon, author of Even in Darkness and Hard Cider
"With passionate commitment and conscientious research, Judith Berlowitz shares the story of her relative, Klara Philipsborn, a German-Jewish refugee who flees to Spain and enlists in the storied Quinto Regimiento in defense of the Republic during the Spanish Civil War . . . Berlowitz tells it with a gripping intensity that will catch you up and help you to understand this era in very personal, human terms."
--Nancy Wallach, Board of Governors, ALBA, Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives
--Rina Benmayor, Professor Emerita, CSU Monterey Bay, member of Genealogies of Sepharad Research Group
"Captivating. On the eve of the Nazi rise to power, a German Jewish Communist finds the home she craves in Spain, where she becomes deeply involved in defending the Republic. Klara's passion for life and freedom and the pungent sensual details create an immersive experience. The kind of diary Anne Frank might have written if she had survived to adulthood."
--Kate Raphael, author of Murder Under the Bridge, a Palestine mystery
--Anthony L. Geist, University of Washington, Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives
"Judith Berlowitz's Home So Far Away is an absorbing tale: as her heroine Klara moves between a Germany where Jews are increasingly threatened, to Catholic Spain where Muslims & Jews once flourished, her Jewish identity becomes more central, just as it becomes more hidden. A fascinating historical adventure!"
--Penny Rosenwasser, author of Hope into Practice
"Home So Far Away is a tour de force of historical fiction. I walked in the shoes and saw through the eyes of the heroine, Klara, and for the first time, I felt the intensity of the struggle of the Spanish Civil War in my own bones --I lived the history through Klara's words. I couldn't leave the story behind, inspired by the strength and courage of those who fought for freedom at great expense and live on through our memory."
--Linda Joy Myers, President of National Association of Memoir Writers, author of Don't Call Me Mother, Song of the Plains, and the forthcoming novel The Forger of Marseille
"Set amid the travails of the Spanish Civil War, the Second Republic, and the Primo dictatorship before it, this book portrays one character's place in Spain's tumultuous early twentieth century. But it is more. Portraying a woman, who is a Jew, who is German, and who shuttles between Germany and Spain, Berlowitz also ruminates on one's place in history and the impact that large historical events have on all of us."
--Joshua Goode, Associate Professor of History and Cultural Studies, Chair, Department of History Claremont Graduate University
"...Klara's belief in love and her optimism, humanism, feminism, and general chutzpah make her an easy-to-root-for protagonist. . . . an inspiring, insightful, and evocative read."
--The Indypendent