ingenious ... wonderfully vital and idiosyncratic, a model of how history writing can be made fresh ... an innovative and immediate account of a story that has world-historical significance. * The Guardian *
Cockerell tells the entire story through extracts from newspaper reports, letters, memoirs, documents and interviews. This is an ambitious and high-risk venture. Yet she pulls it off with verve. She handles her material with a maestro's touch.
* The Times *
A fabulous family history ... Cockerell has an unerring eye for selecting, editing and juxtaposing the most revealing quotations. So the result feels
deeply immersive and dramatic. One gets a thrilling sense of history unfolding in real time, of people confused and flailing about in response to immediate events without any sense of what we know now.
An exceptionally vivid and compelling family history. * The Observer *
Cockerell's approach, drawing together a vast range of original source material, bring s her cast of characters to life with vivacity, their idiosyncrasies and foibles intact.
* The Telegraph *
a bold and provocative book * Literary Review *
A truly radical book; radical in subject, radical in form. For the most tragic Reasons, it could not feel more immediate; and yet it's
a fluid, fast-paced, hugely enjoyable and engaging read. -- Andrew Marr
Meticulously researched, elegantly constructed, unforgettable -- Jonathan Freedland, author of The Escape Artist
This is an
extraordinarily original way of writing memoir, history and truth.
An enthralling book and a wonderful new writer -- Laura Cumming
Utterly compelling, at times amusing, at times heartbreaking. The characters of
Melting Point will live with you long after the final page -- Antonia Fraser
Cockerell deftly interweaves memoir with world-changing events and tells a story that is both
important and beautiful. This is a riveting, timeless and timely book. It is history that reads like a novel.
Melting Point is
simply extraordinary -- Ariana Neumann
It is every historian's challenge to make their readers feel present in the past. With
innovative stylistic daring and a wonderful gift for narrative, Rachel Cockerell succeeds triumphantly. This
exceptionally moving, multigenerational story ranges across continents and time, addressing the biggest questions of identity, hope and belonging, while never losing touch with the humanity of her extraordinary ancestors -- Juliet Nicolson
Melting Point possessed me entirely. I kept thinking this shouldn't really work, but it does much much more than work. It's the most extraordinarily original, resonant, powerful rendering of the history it imparts - although it never feels like a history. And nor does it feel like a fiction. It feels like its own thing entirely. Hard to think of anything more vital right now. It really is an astonishing book, and one I hope so many people will read and learn from.
-- Devorah Baum, author of On Marriage
A
strikingly original, brilliantly crafted, vividly drawn work of history and memoir - Cockerell's storytelling brings the period to life -- Paul Caruana Galizia, author of A Death in Malta
An unusually fascinating and authoritative book... it is unlike any other history book you will ever have read.
* The Oldie *
Vividly told, rigorously researched * Jewish Chronicle *
A
fascinating saga, full of unexpected twists and encounters ranging across continents,
compellingly told through contemporary snippets and insights. A bold and surprisingly successful formula -- Adam Zamoyski, author of Napoleon and Poland: A History
At a time when there is so much false history and misleading mythology about Israel and Zionism,
this gripping account of Jews seeking sanctuary from Europe's deadly antisemitism is a timely and necessary work that deserves to be widely read. Their desperation, hope, idealism and determination to survive leaves a profound sense of a people in need of a home, wherever they could find one. -- Dave Rich, author of Everyday Hate
Rachel Cockerell has crafted a
superbly original work of narrative history - an epic tale of memory and migration. It would be difficult to read this
superb book and remain unmoved. -- Francisco Garcia, author of We All Go Into the Dark
Strikingly original ...
Cockerell succeeds admirably in her stated intention to tell this little-known story in a way that is more like a novel than a work of history. * The Bookseller *