Kirstin Gwyer's meticulously researched and skillfully argued study identifies a surprising yet significant 'blind spot' in both academic research and popular reception, highlighting how and why novels by German-Jewish authors of the 'first generation' were ignored first by publishers and subsequently by scholarship ... The volume includes a thorough bibliography and useful index, and Gwyer's study will be of great value and interest to scholars working on these specific authors and to scholars of Holocaust studies and trauma theory more generally. The author demonstrates an impressive knowledge of the German, English, French, and Dutch reception of the works under consideration, yet one wishes that English translations of all citations from primary, secondary, and theoretical works would have been provided, so that this important volume could reach the broadest possible audience.