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Go Down to Silence

Go Down to Silence

List Price: $11.99
Your Price: $8.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very moving novel
Review: Due to the help of Belgium Christians, Jew Jacob Horowitz survived the Holocaust. However, he never forgot the horrors of the Nazis even decades later. Although his mother pleaded he remember he was Jewish, the terror destroyed his faith in God. Now several decades later, Jacob is a successful Cleveland businessman with two grownup children with families of their own. Jacob and his youngest son Isaac are alienated because he has always refused to mention the horrors he faced during the Nazi abomination. That estrangement seems silly now to Jacob when he learns he is dying and that one of his European benefactors is near death. With his son in hand, Jacob plans to say good-bye to Pierre and hello to his family.

Told in flashbacks, GO DOWN TO SILENCE is a fantastic human drama that will inspire anyone with a soul. The story line is incredible as readers feel Jacob's emotions as his life winds down and he tries one last time for salvation on the spiritual and mortal planes. G. K. Belliveau has written an amazing tale that brings the aftermath of the Holocaust home in a way rarely seen in a novel.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I almost didn't read it
Review: I just happened to snag this one off the "new books" shelf at the library (sorry Mr. Belliveau) and wasn't particularly excited about reading it since I've read so many books on the holocaust and figured this probably wouldn't provide a new perspective. I was wrong. It was gripping text from the beginning and brings up questions about where our sense of right and wrong comes from and how we make the choices that we make. Never once while reading this did it occur to me that this was a "Christian" book. . .I learned that the instant I finished the book and walked to the computer to beg my own redemption by writing a review. In fact, I kept looking at the author's name and wondering if he too was a Jewish man who was using a pseudonym like one of the characters in the story. This is a book about people, both Jewish and Christian, who suffered in WWII and this is the first time I have taken the time to let others know about a really, really good book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What Christian fiction should be
Review: I knew Mr. Belliveau would write a great novel. He taught my English composition class this year,and he made writing interesting to me in ways it had never been before. The novel draws the reader into the mind of the lead character. He/she feels the anguish of Jacob Horowitz, as he reflects on the trials of his childhood and mistakes he made. Belliveau does a great job handling the constant "flash backs" between today and the 1940s. He keeps the story line conherent, while not giving away too much in the way of details. The characters are human, not rehashed stereotypes, which is not the norm with stories set in World War II. I found the story gripping and thought provoking. I would encourage those in the Christian community (or non-Christian) to read this book. Like everyone else,Mr. Belliveau will have to beat the odds if he is to make it as a writer. I sincerely hope he does, I would love to see more books by him.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I read this book in one night!
Review: Mr. Belliveau teaches at my college and in fact I was in his class last year. When his book came out I knew I had to read it. I picked the book up and didn't put it down again until 4 hours later when I had read it from cover to cover. It is a wonderful story and I found myself lost in it. I cried when it was over and while I was reading it. It is definitely touching and moving. A wonderful read no matter what the occasion.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A moving account.
Review: What does it mean to be a young Jewish boy in war-torn, occupied Belgium during WWII? It means that your life suddenly becomes a living hell where you're constantly afraid, always in hiding, and you watch the Nazis (whoever they are) take your father and uncle to the death camps, and you're not even sure what's going on or why you're being hunted. Those were the thoughts that kept going through seventy-one-year old Jacob Horowitz's mind as he waited at the airport for his son, Isaac. He was taking Isaac to Belgium to show him his roots This is a deeply personal, emotional first person story of a young Jewish boy's trials in trying to stay alive while understanding the horrors of World War II. Then, after surviving the war, he grows up into a somewhat bitter old man who realizes he needs to set his house in order before he dies. Very moving and easy to follow, even though the time line jumps back and forth from the past to the present. Well written.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A moving account.
Review: What does it mean to be a young Jewish boy in war-torn, occupied Belgium during WWII? It means that your life suddenly becomes a living hell where you're constantly afraid, always in hiding, and you watch the Nazis (whoever they are) take your father and uncle to the death camps, and you're not even sure what's going on or why you're being hunted. Those were the thoughts that kept going through seventy-one-year old Jacob Horowitz's mind as he waited at the airport for his son, Isaac. He was taking Isaac to Belgium to show him his roots This is a deeply personal, emotional first person story of a young Jewish boy's trials in trying to stay alive while understanding the horrors of World War II. Then, after surviving the war, he grows up into a somewhat bitter old man who realizes he needs to set his house in order before he dies. Very moving and easy to follow, even though the time line jumps back and forth from the past to the present. Well written.


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