Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow

Time to Read
4 hrs 21 mins

Reading Time

4 hrs 21 mins

How long to read Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow?

The estimated word count of Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow is 65,100 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 4 hrs 21 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 7 hrs 14 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 2 hrs 25 mins.

Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow - 65,100 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 7 hrs 14 mins
Average 250 words/min 4 hrs 21 mins
Fast 450 words/min 2 hrs 25 mins
Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow by Deborah Tannen
Authors
Deborah Tannen

More about Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow

65,100 words

Word Count

for Finding My Father: His Century-Long Journey from World War I Warsaw and My Quest to Follow

7 hours

Audiobook length


Description

A #1 New York Times bestselling author traces her father’s life from turn-of-the-century Warsaw to New York City in an intimate memoir about family, memory, and the stories we tell. Long before she was the acclaimed author of a groundbreaking book about women and men, praised by Oliver Sacks for having “a novelist’s ear for the way people speak,” Deborah Tannen was a girl who adored her father. Though he was often absent during her childhood, she was profoundly influenced by his gift for writing and storytelling. As she grew up and he grew older, she spent countless hours recording conversations with her father for the account of his life she had promised him she’d write. But when he hands Tannen journals he kept in his youth, and she discovers letters he saved from a woman he might have married instead of her mother, she is forced to rethink her assumptions about her father’s life and her parents’ marriage.  In this memoir, Tannen embarks on the poignant, yet perilous, quest to piece together the puzzle of her father’s life. Beginning with his astonishingly vivid memories of the Hasidic community in Warsaw, where he was born in 1908, she traces his journey: from arriving in New York City in 1920 to quitting high school at fourteen to support his mother and sister, through a vast array of jobs, including prison guard and gun-toting alcohol tax inspector, to eventually establishing the largest workers’ compensation law practice in New York and running for Congress. As Tannen comes to better understand her father's—and her own—relationship to Judaism, she uncovers aspects of his life she would never have imagined. Finding My Father is a memoir of Eli Tannen’s life and the ways in which it reflects the near century that he lived. Even more than that, it’s an unflinching account of a daughter’s struggle to see her father clearly, to know him more deeply, and to find a more truthful story about her family and herself.