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Author Aaron Hamburger transports the reader on an immigrant’s journey from Russia to Cuba to Detroit in his novel Hotel Cuba. It’s a personal story because it relates the travels of his grandmother from the village of David-Horodok in Belarus to Cuba and then onto Detroit.
It’s personal for me as well. My family is also from the village of David-Horodok, and I wrote an article in The Detroit Jewish News where there is a memorial to those who perished in World War II due to the Nazis. I, like the author, grew up in Detroit.
Recently, I had the opportunity to interview Hamburger about his book Hotel Cuba on a Zoom call with Descendants of David-Horodok. He relates a fascinating story of how the book came about. He met with Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Detroit to talk about immigration, and she suggested he write a book about his grandmother’s plight. Through family interviews, recordings, research and trips to Havana, Hamburger weaves a rich tale of two sisters travelling to unknown countries.
The book is as inviting as the cover.
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