My Grandfather's Knife EPB Book Cover Enlarge Book Cover

My Grandfather’s Knife EPB

Hidden Stories from the Second World War

By Joseph Pearson

Even the most ordinary of objects can tell a spectacular story

A knife, a diary, a recipe book, a stringed instrument and a cotton pouch. Each belonged to an individual who was in their twenties during the Second World War: a fresh-faced prairie boy, a melancholic youth, a capable cook, a musician wounded at the front and a survivor.

Over a cup of tea, try asking your friends which object they’d choose to represent their lives. The enthusiasm of their responses will give you an indication of how well objects anchor sprawling personal histories. Joseph Pearson, a Canadian historian and author, talked to elderly family members, friends, colleagues and acquaintances—people drawn from everyday life—and asked them the same question: Is there an object that tells your wartime story? In many cases, he asked the question in reverse: Could the wartime story of a deceased person be revealed through an object they once owned?

Through rigorous research and in engaging prose, Joseph Pearson illuminates the often-dark history of the twentieth century by bringing to life the stories of everyday objects in the hands of everyday people.

ISBN: 9781443465939
Imprint: HarperAvenue
On Sale: Apr 12, 2022
List price: $17.99
No of pages: 304
Trim Size: 1.000 in (w) x 1.000 in (h) x 1.000 in (d)
BISAC 1: HISTORY / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / General
BISAC 2: HISTORY / Military / Canada
BISAC 3: HISTORY / Europe / Germany

Joseph Pearson

Biography

JOSEPH PEARSON was born in Edmonton in 1975. He graduated from Middlebury College in Vermont and received a master’s degree in philosophy and his doctorate in history from the University of Cambridge. Pearson worked for the United Nations and the European Commission before returning to teaching, first at Columbia University and then at the Barenboim-Said Akademie in Berlin, where he lectures on the humanities and creative writing. His essays and short fiction appear regularly in literary journals, and he is the author of Berlin, a portrait of the city in which he currently lives.

 

Alex Wyndham

Even the most ordinary of objects can tell a spectacular story

A knife, a diary, a recipe book, a stringed instrument and a cotton pouch. Each belonged to an individual who was in their twenties during the Second World War: a fresh-faced prairie boy, a melancholic youth, a capable cook, a musician wounded at the front and a survivor.

Over a cup of tea, try asking your friends which object they’d choose to represent their lives. The enthusiasm of their responses will give you an indication of how well objects anchor sprawling personal histories. Joseph Pearson, a Canadian historian and author, talked to elderly family members, friends, colleagues and acquaintances—people drawn from everyday life—and asked them the same question: Is there an object that tells your wartime story? In many cases, he asked the question in reverse: Could the wartime story of a deceased person be revealed through an object they once owned?

Through rigorous research and in engaging prose, Joseph Pearson illuminates the often-dark history of the twentieth century by bringing to life the stories of everyday objects in the hands of everyday people.

ISBN: 9781443465939
Imprint: HarperAvenue
On Sale: Apr 12, 2022
List price: $17.99
No of pages: 304
Trim Size: 1.000 in (w) x 1.000 in (h) x 1.000 in (d)
BISAC 1: HISTORY / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / General
BISAC 2: HISTORY / Military / Canada
BISAC 3: HISTORY / Europe / Germany

Joseph Pearson

Biography

JOSEPH PEARSON was born in Edmonton in 1975. He graduated from Middlebury College in Vermont and received a master’s degree in philosophy and his doctorate in history from the University of Cambridge. Pearson worked for the United Nations and the European Commission before returning to teaching, first at Columbia University and then at the Barenboim-Said Akademie in Berlin, where he lectures on the humanities and creative writing. His essays and short fiction appear regularly in literary journals, and he is the author of Berlin, a portrait of the city in which he currently lives.

 

Alex Wyndham