Kilima.com - an international online store featuring Art, Film, History, Literature, Music and Travel...

 or browse Countries
 Location:  Home» Austria » General AAS » Ten Green Bottles: The True Story of One Family's Journey from War-torn Austria to the Ghettos of Shanghai  

Ten Green Bottles: The True Story of One Family's Journey from War-torn Austria to the Ghettos of Shanghai

Ten Green Bottles: The True Story of One Family's Journey from War-torn Austria to the Ghettos of Shanghai

enlarge enlarge 
Author: Vivian Jeanette Kaplan
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $16.47
You Save: $8.48 (34%)



New (25) Used (10) Collectible (2) from $8.99

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 118669

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Pages: 304
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.6 x 1.1

ISBN: 0312330545
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5318092251132
EAN: 9780312330545
ASIN: 0312330545

Publication Date: November 2, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

   People of the Book: A Novel
   The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World (P.S.)
   The Book Thief
   The Septembers of Shiraz: A Novel (P.S.)
   Loving Frank: A Novel

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
To Nini Karpel, growing up in Vienna during the 1920s was a romantic confection. Whether schussing down ski slopes or speaking of politics in coffee houses, she cherished the city of her birth. But in the 1930s an undercurrent of conflict and hate began to seize the former imperial capital. This struggle came to a head when Hitler took possession of neighboring Germany. Anti-Semitism, which Nini and her idealistic friends believed was impossible in the socially advanced world of Vienna, became widespread and virulent.

The Karpel's Jewish identity suddenly made them foreigners in their own homeland. Tormented, disenfranchised, and with a broken heart, Nini and her family sought refuge in a land seven thousand miles across the world.

Shanghai, China, one of the few countries accepting Jewish immigrants, became their new home and refuge. Stepping off the boat, the Karpel family found themselves in a land they could never have imagined. Shanghai presented an incongruent world of immense wealth and privilege for some and poverty for the masses, with opium dens and decadent clubs as well as rampant disease and a raging war between nations.

Ten Green Bottles is the story of Nini Karpel's struggles as she told it to her daughter Vivian so many years ago. This true story depicts the fierce perseverance of one family, victims of the forces of evil, who overcame suffering of biblical proportion to survive. It was a time when ordinary people became heroes.


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Very Outstanding Book   August 5, 2005
Bernice
10 out of 11 found this review helpful


Ten Green Bottles is one of the most powerful, emotional, fascinating and beautifully written books I have ever read. Where has this author been?

The story begins in the early 1920s in Vienna where a five year old Jewish girl, called Nini, begins to experience what it is to be the youngest of three sisters. It is written in Nini's voice and throughout the book you seem to live every moment of her life as if you were in her skin. You laugh, cry, feel and experience everything that happens to her as if it were happening to you, yet the book is non-fiction.

The story tells of her life in a growing family and the hardships of her mother in raising her children and carrying on their business after her father's death. As Nini grows into her teenage years, your senses are filled with the excitement of Vienna and the thrill of skiing in the mountains nearby. Then the Nazis come and everything changes.

As Jews are now considered vermin, they must flee the city or they will surely die. With the help of a gentile lawyer they are able to leave Vienna for Shanghai. On arriving in this no-man's land with almost no money, they find themselves in the middle of another war between China and Japan. Living in squalor and trying to survive, their life is made even more miserable. Japan, an ally of Germany, forces them and about 20,000 other Jews into a small ghetto with over 100,000 of the poorest Chinese. The story tells of their life and the life of the Jewish community as they try to make it through to the end of the war under the most deplorable conditions imaginable. They are eventually liberated by the Americans and stay until the Communist takeover in the late 1940s when they leave. The story ends with their exceptionally well written arrival in the white winter of Canada where they do not have to fear anymore.

I read a lot and to me this book was a literary masterpiece. I also learned about a very interesting part of the Holocaust that I had not known.



5 out of 5 stars Ten Green Bottles   February 25, 2005
Steffi Bokser (San Diego, CA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

This book is a riviting account of a family's struggle to survive in a war-torn Europe in the late 1930's. It is a true story, written with love and empathy by the heroine's daughter. This is a story not to be missed. It is definitely the best book I have read in a long while.


4 out of 5 stars Strangely turgid writing - reason becomes evident   June 21, 2005
Mary McGreevey (SAn Francisco)
5 out of 12 found this review helpful

Any fan of China and Shanghai would grab for this book, as I did, only to be disappointed that the reactions of the main character, one Nini Karpel from Vienna, seem to be weak. Perhaps I was a bit slow in realizing that in fact, it is the daughter, Vivian Jeannette Kaplan, who is writing it in the mother's first-person voice, so that the authentic feeling is missing. I even wondered if the writer had been to China, for her knowledge of its people is so skimpy, so dismissive, as to be either total arrogance, or the indifference of the ignorant.

Other Westerners have certainly lived in China and written about for years. "Oil for the Lamps of CHina" by Alice Tisdale Hobart, written by the wife of a Standard Oil executive in Nanking, tells in great detail of the life with the Chinese, the business dealings, the superstitions, sanitation, clothing, housing, the filth, the women's bound feet and so on.

For this writer, China might as well have been Africa or any other hellhole where her parents unfortunately had to go when they, as European Jews, were unwelcome throughout the Western world. The book focuses on the immigrants from Russia and the thousands of GERman, Austrian and other Jews pouring into Shanghai, their daily struggles when they arrive with no money, but the scant attention given to the realities of the squalor, stench, and other overpowering and offending parts of Chinese life seem to be reported as if in a WHO document. The author coolly states that 25-30,000 dead bodies are taken off the streets of Shanghai alone by the Chinese Benevolent Society, since there is no official governmental agency to deal with it. Somehow, this small bit of data is part of a report, rather than the real life encountered by the author, if she had gone through these slums as reported.

All this being said, and the turgid style left aside, the author does provide an interesting account of a very prosperous Jewish family, who owned three department stores in Vienna before being kicked out. Some say comfortably well-off, but any Austrian would tell you that the family was just plain rich. The life that the young Nini Karpel experiences, of dances, parties, dresses, skiing, cafe life and so on, was a life only to be dreamed of by the Austrian masses in Vienna during the 1920's and 30's, with widespread unemployment, thousands of idle men (like young Adolf Hitler) sleeping in men's hostels on the edge of the city. Nini's enthusiastic view of Austrian life, walking the streets of the city, must surely have been dampened by some awareness of the distress the population was in. Both Berlin and Vienna were places of desperation for unemployed masses, with soup kitchens and tent cities all around the cities. Ah well, rich girl didn't notice.

I think that if the author herself had written it, rather than her daughter doing it as research, the real facts of life would come through much more strongly. Nini's family also considered themselves real Jews, not secular Jews, so they would have felt themselves apart from most Austrians on a daily basis, while with their wealth, a separate and rarified air for themselves. Many Jews by then had no interest in their religious roots and would not have fought so hard to defend themselves from the kind Belgian nuns who gave them shelter in the Shanghai convent.

THere is a scene in the book of a Belgian nun showing Nini a full larder in the back of the convent, packed with meats, cheeses, sausauges, chocolates and all the Belgian delights. The nun tells her that if she converts, she can have all this kind of food, not such a hard life. Nini and her family have been eating a very poor convent diet of rice and vegetables and bread.

Anyone ever deal with the nuns and think that this scene would happen? Would a nun even try to convert a woman who's so adamant about her faith? Something doesn't ring true here.

The report-writing style makes the book more third-person than first-person, but still, if this does not irritate, a lot of information can be gleaned about how the displaced Jews used their wits and trickery to keep a head above water in the foul ghettoes of Shanghai.

Ten years later, without having learned more than a few words of Chinese, the family leaves for Canada, with visas obtained by relatives in Toronto. A fondness for China, its people and its culture does not come through anywhere in the book, but the author (daughter) wants us to believe that they loved China.

Well! A reader can look elsewhere for some real information! This is just entertainment!

SHANGHAI DIARY is an excellent account of a similar refuguee, a woman who'd come from wealth, arriving penniless, and surviving through her wits. She writes of the real life amongst Chinese.




4 out of 5 stars A film on paper   May 22, 2005
polydegmon (jupiter, fl USA)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

An interesting change from the Western refugee tales. The author writes in her her mother's voice, which is risky, but it rings fairly true. By starting her story well before the war the author creates a relationship with her characters in advance of the events leading to their emigration. Her mother is a fan of Gone With The Wind, and Ten Green Bottles reads like a 1930's epic film. You can see all the 30's/40's actors in the roles of her family.

Very engaging style and very informative - I learned things I had not known and considered things I knew differently. I'm off to find other biography dealing with Chinese bound European refugees.



5 out of 5 stars Decadence and Poverty of Wartime Shanghai   May 10, 2006
Henry Waller
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I thoroughly enjoyed "Ten Green Bottles". Unlike other books on Shanghai of that period, I particularly relished the intimate glimpse of the extreme wealth and decadence that was ongoing alongside the abject poverty of the immigrants that fled Europe. Much is written here of how people of many nations with unimaginable wealth made Shanghai their "sumptuous playground" between the stench and filth of the city.

In particular, the author's description of the Bolero Club through the eyes of Nini, who worked as a hostess there, was so exciting and so descriptive and so alive that I was sure I was in the room with some of the most powerful men and glamorous women of the time. Her detailed description of the opium den next door, a "grand salon" established exclusively for the very rich, is breathtaking.

This book is a must read for anyone who wants to live the Shanghai of World War II from its lows to its highs.




jewish  shanghai  

Kilima.com in association with Amazon.com

powered by Associate-O-Matic

flag graphics courtesy of 3dflags.com

Copyright © 1996 - 2008 Kilima.com

Kilima.com Info...
About Kilima.com
Ordering & Shipping
Kilima.com Archive
Contact Kilima.com
Webmaster Resources
Affiliate Programs
Kilima.com Traffic