Cover Image: The Last Ships from Hamburg

The Last Ships from Hamburg

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Member Reviews

Jews fled from Eastern Europe in great numbers during the first decades of the 20th century. Jews have shaped American life since its inception, and much of the modern "America" that we find ourselves in can be traced back to immigrants who came to our shores during this time period. I especially loved the way the book split the "big picture" narrative with smaller stories about the immigrants. Would highly recommend!

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What do J.P. Morgan, Kaiser Wilhelm II, and Henry Cabot Lodge have in common? You're right: antisemitism! And as illustrated in Steven Ujifusa's The Last Ships from Hamburg, they were not alone.

The book is pretty sprawling narrative covering the business of immigrant steamship transportation. The main characters are the aforementioned Morgan, and also Albert Ballin and Jacob Schiff. I knew nothing about Ballin and Schiff before this. Ujifusa makes them very interesting characters with specific drives and also obvious faults. There is no hero worship in this book even if there are heroic deeds throughout.

Ujifusa follows the explosion of Russian-Jewish flight from Russia right before World War I. The narrative of the business dealings was interesting, but the real highlight of the book for me was whenever Ujifusa tells smaller stories about specific immigrants and what they faced. A small chapter on what an immigrant mother and child experienced is one of the saddest things I have ever read. The business side of things is important to understanding the greater story, but these smaller instances are when I was completely hooked. Give it a read!

(This book was provided as an advance copy by Netgalley and Harper Books.)

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