The Silk Factory

The Silk Factory

Finding Threads of My Family's True Holocaust Story

A memoir about the Holocaust, generational trauma, and the process of discovering how little we know.

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About the Book

Acclaimed former journalist Michael Hickins wondered why he seemed doomed to repeat the same pattern of failed marriages and unhappy children. Then came an email from a nephew he knew nothing about — one that led him to new insights into his family’s life during the Holocaust, the discovery that the silk factory taken from his family by the Nazi government was still in operation, and about the heroism of a French small-town mayor who saved his father’s life. What once seemed like fuzzy anecdotes about the Holocaust came into sharper focus and helped explain why his parents behaved the way they did, laying the foundation for his own behaviors and misadventures.

A powerful examination of the past in light of the present, The Silk Factory is as much an autobiographical descent into the generational trauma induced by history as it is a memoir of the Holocaust itself. Sparked by an email from a nephew he didn’t even know existed, Hickins, a former journalist turned marketing flak, learns of the existence of a silk factory that once belonged to his family before being expropriated by the Nazi government, relives the death of people he never met, and comes to learn of the heroism of Paul Mirat, the mayor of a small village in France who saves his father’s life along with hundreds of others. Hickins is also forced to confront his own patterns of misbehaviors as he tries to raise a young child free of the blood and guilt of the past.

RELEASED: 1 June 2023

Details
Author:
Series: Holocaust Heritage
Genre: Holocaust
Tags: Audio rights available, Award-winning Publication, Foreign Rights Available, Holocaust memoir
ASIN: B0C2C8SF8R
ISBN: 9789493276895
List Price: $16,95
eBook Price: $5,95
Endorsements
The Silk Factory is a terrific read, a Holocaust book unlike any other. Hickins, a refreshingly honest memoirist, takes readers on a suspenseful journey, skillfully navigating hard questions both about Nazi crimes and his own life choices.
– Sam Apple, author of Ravenous: Otto Warburg, the Nazis, and the Search for the Cancer-Diet Connection.
By turns razor-sharp and heartbreakingly tender, Michael Hickins’s memoir is an unforgettable exploration of personal and intergenerational history—the traumas we inherit, the stories we tell ourselves and our children, and the stories that are hidden, even as they shape our lives. Above all, The Silk Factory is about the courage to seek the truth.
– Dawn Raffel, author of The Strange Case of Dr. Couney and Boundless as the Sky.
What we know, what we will never know, are the tormenting and tangled concerns of children of refugees and survivors. Michael Hickins in his remarkable and intense memoir The Silk Factory deals complexly with fragments of his family’s past as he wrestles with these questions. Yes, this is a historical journey where, with scant clues, Hickins uncovers the story of his family’s factory and home stolen during the Holocaust (which still operates today) and the murder of his family members. But this is also a powerful and unflinching personal quest as Hickins bravely attempts to untangle the legacy of generational trauma, the corrosive sorrow and rage that has infected his childhood, his marriage, and his parenting. 
– Victoria Redel, author of Paradise.
In this story from a Holocaust survivor’s son, as he uncovers his past, as he learns about his family – learns so much that no one’s ever told him – and shares with us as he learns, we learn from him, we see how that which was sundered remains broken, generation after generation. And decades later, the loss, the pain, lives on inside him too, his failed marriages, the rage that he can barely keep bottled up. But by the end of this story Hickins finds himself in a different place. As he puts it, “not forgiving yourself at all is the best way of passing the behavior down to future generations. I may be inexcusable, but I have to forgive myself for the sake of my children.”
– Michael Gottlieb, author of Mostly Clearing and The Voices, and a founding member of the Language poetry school.
Michael Hickins has written an acerbically funny and ultimately heart-wrenching Picaresque memoir in The Silk Factory: Finding Threads of My Family’s True Holocaust Story. Beautifully observed details of a seemingly last-chance marriage and late-in-life fatherhood combine with a quest to right the Holocaust-era theft of a family business make for an entertaining and emotionally resonant page-turner. As we follow Hickins from America, where he has “managed the seemingly impossible… Laura, who loves me like no other, doesn’t like me anymore,” to Europe and a road trip accompanied by a motley group of sparring characters, he also takes us on another journey, that of transforming his own acute and self-destructive shortcomings into some chance of redemption. A wonderful, deeply illuminating book to savor.
– Alice LaPlante, New York Times bestselling author of Turn of Mind, Half Moon Bay and The Making of a Story
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About the Author
Michael Hickins

Michael Hickins is the author of the acclaimed short story collection The Actual Adventures of Michael Missing (Alfred A. Knopf), the novels Blomqvist and The What Do You Know Contest, and the memoir I Lived in France and So Can You (Dzanc Books). Hickins was born in Queens, New York, and plied his trade as a journalist with The Wall Street Journal, eWeek, and Women’s Wear Daily. He lives with his wife and son in the deep dark woods of Westchester County, New York, USA.

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