Hmm, this started off well and I was enjoying Hugh's recounting of his childhood and upbringing, then his relationship with his mother and how her death affected him.
The chapters of the book dealing with him living in the Canadian Arctic are interesting and informative, if not a little repetitive at times.
The falling down point for me was his discussion of Israel. Brody spends time on a kibbutz as a younger man, getting to know "Socialist Zionist" members who are mainly pacifists. He visits far removed family members in different parts of Israel and pretty much insults them by his indifference towards their horrific past and journeys to safety. He questions whether war criminal Adolf Eichmann deserves the death penalty! He discusses Palestine as "Occupied" and then looks at the two wars fought by Israel against neighboring Arab states through a biased lens. Brody is an apologist. Despite all the horror and suffering his family and other Jews have been through, he is a critic of the existence of Israel. This doesn't sit well with me. He presents a one sided view of the Israeli state as aggressive and authoritarian, but fails to give credence to the constant threat faced by them on all sides and also seems to forget that Jews have lived in "Palestine" since biblical times.
The bias shown by Brody is disappointing, and it dampened my enjoyment of the book. When someone pretty much negates the experience of their own persecuted people, something is amiss.
2 stars, disappointing.