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Sherwin Gluck is a writer and independent historian whose work explores the intersections of memory, family, and the Jewish experience in the twentieth century. His publications include T.R.’s Summer White House, Oyster Bay (1999), Private Good Luck – A Memoir (2019), and Pappus – The Saga of a Jewish Family (2021), as well as his editorial work on As I Remember… (2025). His most recent book, From the Ashes – The Documents of a Jewish Family (upcoming), is a comprehensive volume based on his family’s archival materials, now preserved in the collections of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Yad Vashem. Gluck holds a BSE in Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics from the University of Pennsylvania and lives in New York.

AS I REMEMBER... Cover
BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR

AS I REMEMBER...

BY Maria Gluck • POSTED ON Sept. 15, 2025

A Jewish immigrant and her nephew reflect on their family’s history in Europe and the United States in this nonfiction anthology.

In this eclectic familial history and memoir, Sherwin Gluck offers another installment of his ongoing series. Two previous published books—Private Good Luck (2019) and Pappus: The Saga of a Jewish Family (2021) —were penned by Sherwin, who serves as the editor of this collection of memoiristic vignettes and miscellaneous writings by his aunt, Maria Gluck. The first section offers Maria’s reflections on growing up in a small village in Czechoslovakia in the early 20th century, written prior to her death in 2013. She intended it for her youngest brother, who didn’t remember much from his early childhood overseas, and it traces more than 100 years of family history. Maria recalls, for instance, the differences between her mother’s and father’s extended families; although both were Jewish and followed kosher practices, her father’s family were prosperous business owners, while her mother’s came from more humble origins and were more conservative religiously. The book provides a unique lens into Jewish life in Europe prior to World War II, and later, it harrowingly tells how Maria and her siblings narrowly escaped the Holocaust by immigrating to Columbus, Ohio, in 1940; almost the entirety of their family who remained in Europe were killed by the Nazi regime. Maria’s memoir is fewer than 200 pages in length, followed by more than 450 pages of miscellaneous musings. This eclectic assortment includes additional commentary on her family tree, early writings of an anticipated second book, and even a fictional story that centers on similar themes as the memoir.

Many of these reflections, however, repeat information, making the narrative feel quite repetitive at times. Sherwin, as editor, presents them in a lightly edited format that lends a feeling of authenticity to a work that aims to preserve Maria’s memories for posterity. He prefaces his aunt’s writings with introductions, and provides a good deal of editorial commentary and notes that provide historical context, clarification, and translations of Hebrew and Yiddish terminology: “I came from a very balabuste family [well cared for, religious, and close-knit family], well known and respected,” reads a representative passage from the first page of her remembrance. Sherwin allows Maria to tell her story in her own words, including accounts of controversial disputes with family members; many readers won’t share all of her views, such as her opposition to gay marriage. He reflects on his personal memories of Maria, as well, who never had children of her own; for example, he presents the eulogy he delivered at her funeral, which includes an anecdote about visiting her apartment in Queens, New York. Originally written using IBM’s ViaVoice software when Maria was in her 90s, the book’s conversational style presents a narrative that’s full of fascinating detail, despite occasional stream-of-consciousness tangents. Sherwin’s editorial commentary throughout effectively accomplishes its task of adding useful context to her ruminations, where necessary.

A valuable, if often repetitive, perspective on an American Jewish family.

Pub Date: Sept. 15, 2025

ISBN: 9780967254340

Page count: 618pp

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Sept. 9, 2025

Awards, Press & Interests

Private Good Luck: Semifinalist - ScreenCraft Cinematic Book Competition., 2021

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

From the Ashes - The Documents of a Jewish Family

From the Ashes – The Documents of a Jewish Family is a comprehensive documentary history of the Glück and Schwartz families, tracing their lives across Eastern Europe and the United States from the early-19th century through the late 20th century. Structured entirely through primary sources, the book brings together an unparalleled collection of census records, vital documents, immigration and travel papers, legal and financial files, military records, Holocaust documentation, and family memorabilia. Spanning the villages of Polyán, Lelesz and Királyhelmec in Czechoslovakia, the industrial cities of Columbus, Pittsburgh, and New York, the transports through Naples, and the battlefields of Europe, these records illuminate the continuity and rupture of Jewish life before, during, and after the Holocaust. The volume includes rare concentration camp files, restitution claims, Red Cross tracing correspondence, naturalization documents, wartime postcards, business papers, school records, synagogue materials, and artifacts carried through immigration and military service. Presented without fictionalization and organized thematically and by date, From the Ashes allows the reader to follow the family’s journey directly through the documents they left behind: births and deaths, marriages and migrations, wartime service and survival, property loss and postwar bureaucracy, and the rebuilding of community and identity. Together, these materials create a unique, multi-generational portrait of a Jewish family who endured destruction, remade their lives in America, and preserved a record of their world for future generations.

Pappus - The Saga of a Jewish Family

70 letter writers — all interconnected. 1,823 letters — one story. This remarkably comprehensive collection of letters written just before, during, and after World War II documents the experiences of an observant Jewish family from Polyán, Czechoslovakia — a small agricultural village. Of six siblings, one emigrated to America in 1938, four more in 1940, and one remained behind with his wife, little children, and elderly father. Written predominantly in Hungarian, English, or both, these letters memorialize and illuminate the lives of ordinary people enduring extraordinary events. Through them, experience history as it unfolds. Read letters from children learning to write, grandparents living out their golden years, family, friends, and neighbors — Jew and Gentile alike. Some will become martyrs, others survivors. A few will be enablers, collaborators, and perpetrators. Painstakingly written on thin airmail paper, v-mail, or plain stationary, they bear postmarks from Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, New York, Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania, California, Missouri, Algeria, Italy, France, Germany, Iceland, Sweden, the Philippines, Florida, and Israel. This volume contains the complete, translated personal correspondence in the family’s special collection now housed in the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. The letters are all encompassing and their historic value is immeasurable. As primary sources, they give a contemporaneous account of the events the writers lived through, undistorted by the passage of time. It is the definitive companion text to Private Good Luck and As I remember… This is my family’s story, in their own words.
Published: Nov. 14, 2021
ISBN: 978-0967254364

Private Good Luck

A teenage Jewish immigrant. A U.S. Army uniform. A war to save the family left behind. Private Good Luck is the remarkable true story of Irving Gluck, a young Jewish man who escaped Czechoslovakia just before the Holocaust—and returned as an American infantryman in WWII to fight the Nazis, defend the freedom he found in the U.S., and honor the family who could not escape. This Holocaust memoir traces Irving’s journey from rural Europe to the battlefields of Germany, weaving together Jewish memory, wartime service, and the anguish of knowing that his father, siblings, nieces, and nephews were murdered in Auschwitz and Mauthausen. Written by his son, Sherwin Gluck, and based on original letters, photographs, and firsthand accounts, the book provides a deeply personal perspective on Jewish resilience, moral courage, and the fight for justice across two continents. The hardcover and paperback editions include exclusive material not available in the Kindle edition. This memoir also offers essential context for the upcoming digital collection being curated by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.
Published: July 15, 2019
ISBN: 978-0967254319

TR's Summer White House Oyster Bay

Before Air Force One and Camp David, there was Oyster Bay. At Sagamore Hill on Long Island, President Theodore Roosevelt redefined the modern presidency—not just in Washington, but from his own front porch. T.R.'s Summer White House, Oyster Bay tells the fascinating true story of how Roosevelt transformed his beloved home into a fully functioning seat of power. During seven summers in office, he conducted official business, met with foreign dignitaries, and made some of the most pivotal decisions of his presidency—all while immersed in the rhythms of small-town life. Author Sherwin Gluck draws on historical documents, press accounts, and rare archival material to bring to life the bustling activity that surrounded Roosevelt during these months. Discover how this "Summer White House" became a hub of diplomacy, political drama, and presidential leadership. Whether you're a student of American history, a fan of presidential biographies, or someone who cherishes Long Island's heritage, this book is a compelling and accessible account of a unique chapter in U.S. history. Inside you'll find: An in-depth look at Roosevelt's use of Sagamore Hill as an executive retreat Rare insights into the early 20th-century press, politics, and diplomacy The overlooked story of how Oyster Bay helped shape American leadership Praise from Newsday, the Theodore Roosevelt Association, and Harvard's Houghton Library A must-read for anyone interested in Theodore Roosevelt, presidential retreats, or Long Island history.
Published: Jan. 1, 1999
ISBN: 978-0967254395
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