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Review: Loose Connections

Publishers’ good old days

May 26, 2015 17:20
Esther Menell in publishing’s and her heyday

ByMadeleine Kingsley, Madeleine Kingsley

2 min read

No Jewish book lover of a certain age and Mittel European extraction should miss out on Esther Menell's memoir, Loose Connections. True to its title, this meanders - in a most cultivated and colourful way - through Menell's 80 years and her career in what was arguably the golden age of publishing.

Time has a tendency to buff up family romance, and Menell's Estonian dynasty (gazing to camera in old monochrome snaps) seems endearingly exotic, what with a "hare-brained scheme" to extract oil from South African shale, and £50 tips handed out at the Ritz.

Menell's grandfather, a child orphan, grew up apprenticed to a wigmaker. Rather racily for their times, her parents fell in love when married to other partners (a predicament that recurred when Esther's husband announced, as she was shortly to give birth, that he had fallen in love with her friend).

Most chillingly, had her parents not left in 1939, this book would never have appeared, for only a dozen Estonian Jews survived the Nazi occupation.