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Dear America

One Eye Laughing, the Other Weeping: The Diary of Julie Weiss

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This special Dear Ameirca edition is actually two stories in a single volume. In part one of a two-part story, Julie Weiss's world is suddenly torn apart by a war that will forever change the face of humanity. Her life as a privileged Jewish girl quickly becomes one of humiliation and terror. In part two, Julie has left Nazi Austria for New York, where she begins a new life with her extended family who she has never met.

246 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2000

36 people are currently reading
2,396 people want to read

About the author

Barry Denenberg

45Ìýbooks76Ìýfollowers
Barry Denenberg is the critically acclaimed author of non-fiction and historical fiction. His historical fiction includes titles in the Dear America, My Name is America, and Royal Diaries series, many of which have been named NCSS/CBC Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People. His nonfiction books have covered a wide array of topics, from Anne Frank to Elvis Presley. After the publication of An American Hero: The True Story of Charles Lindburgh, Denenberg was interviewed for various documentaries including ABC’s “The Century.�

Denenberg was born in Brooklyn, New York and lived in Long Island, Binghamton, New York, and Palisades Park, New Jersey. “I was a serious reader from an early age and when I attended Boston University in 1968, majoring in history, I worked in a bookstore at night,� he says. “After college I was a book buyer for some fine, independent bookstores, some of the nation’s largest retail book chains and a marketing executive in publishing.

“At the age of forty I came to the startling realization that the glamorous world of power lunches, power politics, and power trips was not for me. I immediately went to work on the Great American Novel (since destroyed) and was rescued when my future wife, Jean Feiwel (then and now publisher of Scholastic Inc.) made me an offer I couldn’t refuse. Scholastic had received a biography of John F. Kennedy that they deemed unacceptable: would I like to try and write one?

“The rest is history in more ways than one. I went on to write biographies of Jackie Robinson, Muhammad Ali, J. Edgar Hoover, Nelson Mandela, Elvis Presley and Voices From Vietnam, an oral history of the war.

“Writing some of the first books in the Dear America series was a turning point in my career. Its popularity and the resulting readers� letters made a great impression on me. This in turn inspired my writing and fueled my research. With my bookstore background and the help of numerous knowledgeable booksellers I am able to assemble an extensive bibliography on each topic I write.

“I think there’s an art to both writing and research. I’m a good writer but a better researcher.�

Something that has added greatly to Denenberg’s perspective on writing for young readers is his volunteer work as Director of Creative Writing and Library Services at the Waterside School in Stamford, Connecticut. Waterside, established in 2001, is an independent school dedicated to educating gifted children of the communities� low-income families.

Aside from writing and teaching Denenberg’s interests include listening to music, reading (books not related to his research), swimming, practicing yoga and spending time with his family.

Barry Denenberg lives in Bedford, New York with his wife and daughter.

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5 stars
1,252 (38%)
4 stars
1,084 (33%)
3 stars
699 (21%)
2 stars
143 (4%)
1 star
41 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 188 reviews
Profile Image for Ana Mardoll.
AuthorÌý7 books371 followers
February 24, 2011
One Eye Laughing (World War II) / 0-439-09518-2

Unlike most Dear America books, the first half of "One Eye Laughing" occurs not in America, but rather in Austria. Julie is a blonde, blue-eyed Jewish girl who watches with growing concern and apprehension as Hitler marches on her beloved city. When the Nazis take over with the barest hint of a fight, she and her family and friends are rounded up to be hurt, humiliated, and tortured for the delight of the non-Jewish population. Julie flees, alone, to America and the second half of the book begins.

The first half, the Austrian half, is troublesome in predictable ways. It seems evident that it would be almost impossible to accurately portray the atrocities of World War II in a manner that would not be disturbing for young adults. When Julie's mother is ordered to 'dress up' in her finest clothes and then dragged off by a group of soldiers, only to return hours later quiet, withdrawn, and suicidal, it is pretty clear that she was brutally gang raped. Julie's mother later commits suicide, as do many of Julie's friends. Julie tells the tale of one man who is doused with gasoline and set on fire. Julie's brother leaves the family to run off to Palestine, and her father (infuriatingly) refuses to accompany her to America, saying that his patients need him more than she does. The overwhelming tone of the story is one of isolation, pain, and hopelessness. Obviously, such a tone is historically accurate, but the result is probably not palatable for many children and young adults. Certainly, reactions will depend on the child in question.

Part two details Julie's new life in America and is frankly rather boring. Julie settles in with her new family with very little problems and immediately begins to live a sort of charmed life. Because she does not want to be mocked for her accent in school, she is given private tutors. She quickly becomes a celebrated success when she unexpectedly subs for "Wendy" in her aunt's professional rendition of "Peter Pan" and the local newspapers crow loudly about the lovely new actress. We receive no further information about Julie's missing brother (is he safe? did he make it to Palestine?) or her father (was he murdered? sent to the camps?) until the brief and depressing epilogue. Julie does not follow the war in the papers because it upsets her. As such, the last half of the novel is almost completely useless as a glimpse into history because Julie encounters neither the War, nor the culture around her, by virtue of being completely sheltered.

The story of her rise to fame is whimsical and light, probably meant to offset the opening horrors of the first half, but the overall combination is rather unpleasant. The result seems to be an introduction of horrors watered down by an unfinished story. I highly recommend that parents read "One Eye Laughing" before providing it to a child, and be prepared to answer the tough questions that World War II always raises.

~ Ana Mardoll
Profile Image for Rebecca Rash.
AuthorÌý1 book9 followers
January 31, 2014
Probably one of the most dramatic, heart wrenching Dear America's I have read.
Profile Image for Leeanne  G.
285 reviews18 followers
September 3, 2020
This was an amazing book. It was so interesting to read a diary of a rich Jewish girl during WWII. It was crazy to see how Julie goes from being rich and high in society to suddenly poor and low. It was sad to think of how quickly people turn on each other. Neighbours, friends, classmates, teachers, and co workers.

It was shocking how Hitler just walked into Austria and just like that, people were worshiping him. I hadn't known that he took over Austria so quickly. And just like that, Julie lost everything. Her country, her belongings, her family, her neighbours and her friends.

In Part 2 she comes to New York. She immerses herself into acting. That is how she distracts herself from worrying about her family. I found it interesting to learn about the theatre.

Overall it was a wonderful, educational book.
Profile Image for Kelsey Hanson.
925 reviews34 followers
December 13, 2015
This book had descent concept but it wasn't always executed as well as it could have. It was much darker than the average Dear America book (which makes sense given the subject matter). It showed some of the heartbreaking choices that Jewish families in Europe had to make such as sending their children away and the sheer damage the fear caused leading many to commit suicide). The biggest flaw in this book occurs with the transition from the first part to the second part. It's pretty abrupt it almost seems like two different stories. The story also wraps up in a hurry leaving a less than stellar epilogue to wrap up the loose ends. Overall it was interesting and heartfelt but not my favorite Dear America novel.
Profile Image for Kayla.
546 reviews15 followers
December 15, 2010
First review....
This was a very good book, but also sad.
This book is a good historical book for someone to read, if they wanted to read about what happened in Holocaust.

Second review....
I am going to read this book again because we are studying the holocaust at school. I finished this book to day at school. I was bored and did not have another reading material with me so I read through every page in this book. I was shocked to learn that the Dear Americas are not real. Or at least that is what I got out of the Information. I will have to further look into this.
Profile Image for Cassie.
44 reviews15 followers
October 25, 2013
I miss the days when the books in this series focused on ordinary, everyday girls and made the historical context the focus. The more recent novels seem to add a lot of extraneous story that doesn't need to be there. A novel that focuses on a young Jewish girl growing up in 1938 Austria is interesting and fascinating enough. She doesn't have to become a famous actress and uncover hidden family drama on top of it.
Profile Image for Mary Bronson.
1,542 reviews87 followers
September 7, 2013
I loved reading this book! I really enjoyed reading it. I thought it was amazing story of a girl named Julie who was Jewish and living in Austria during WWII, but was able to escape Austria and come to New York because she did not have the stereotypical features of a Jewish girl and was able to sneak out of the country. Barry Denenberg did an amazing job!
Profile Image for Beverly.
137 reviews
March 24, 2014
Vienna, Austia was the first to be taken over by Hitler. It was also a cosmopolitan city with many wealthy Jewish businesses. What is astounding, is how quickly Hitlerism destroyed the general good feeling between the Jewish and Gentiles.

Julie's dad was a well respected Dr. and at one point, the Gentile butcher potected the Weiss family with a shotgun and cleaver. This story was so well written, it made me tear up as the Storm Troopers raged through the home, forcing the Dr. and his son to clean up Pro-Austrian slogans with acid and toothbrushes and Mama was forced to dress in her finest for the pleasure of her would be debauchers. She ends up taking her life, and the good Dr. loses no time in getting his daughter a Visa to America.

It was a common practice to "save" the children by putting them up for adoption. Julie's best friend was adopted by an English family and Julie later found her when they were adults.

Even though we all know of the atrocities against the Jews during the Rise of Hitler, it is always shocking to read first hand accounts of the cruelty. Julie survived only because her dad was able to send her to Aunt Clara in America. This young girl kept dreaming of her mother and father and they never survived. At the War's end, Julie was able to reconnect with her friend in England and her brother who had taken refuge in Isreal.

This was a very emotional read for me.
Profile Image for Ari.
508 reviews5 followers
August 27, 2012
The events of this book continue to haunt me. When I was younger, I read a lot of books about the Holocaust, and this one offered a certain appeal compared to others. The book follows Julie Weiss from when she is a normal girl to struggling in Vienna when the Nazis come. After that, she's sent to America where her past haunts her as she struggles to be a normal girl again. Her pain is evident and there are a few interesting moments. One scene that always stayed with me for some odd reason was when she was listening to Orson Welles's War of the Worlds broadcast and the awful anxiety she goes through because she feels as if Hitler has followed her to America.

I feel the need to re-read this book.
Profile Image for Jenna.
462 reviews3 followers
April 16, 2025
This is a quick, short book that reads like the Anne Frank diary, short journal entries that depict the life of a real Jewish girl living in Vienna when Hitler took over Austria. The first half of the book is the harsh terror of the time, and the second is her life in New York where she was sent to an aunt to be safe. It’s not her actual journal, but a historical fiction accounting. I thought I might be able to read it with my elementary-age students but the horrors are a bit much for young kids. Better suited for middle-school age.
Profile Image for Gerard Costello.
65 reviews2 followers
February 19, 2016
THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This book does seem to convey the terror and depression felt by Jews in Vienna following the Nazi acquisition of Austria. Denenberg depicts in dramatic detail the overnight change of Vienna from a cosmopolitan, civilized European city to a circus of loathing, pillage, thuggery and fear, run by thugs and populated by a herd of idiots elated at this sudden orgy of hatred and self empowerment granted them by the Messiah who descended upon their ravaged land from the clouds of Germany to deliver them from sin.
Denenberg does make an effort to show that the hastening of the Viennese to the word and ideas of their glorious new Fuhrer was not unanimous. The chauffeur who offered his meager services to Julie's mother after the fall (or in the eyes of the not Jews, the ascent), the butcher who shows up drunk at the door clutching a bottle in one hand and a pistol in the other and insisting on protecting the family from the roving gangs of Nazi thugs.
Denenberg's good writing allows the reader to feel real pity for Julie through her fast descent into a land of despair, poverty, hunger and fear nightmared for her by this man named Hitler, and the desperation of her family to escape the nightmare. Denenberg makes very clever use of imagery to highlight the shift in Jewish fortunes through the nazification of Vienna. A once beautiful, fashionable, bejeweled and generally dazzling woman is reduced to a narrow figure in cheap house robes. The wonderful, sunny days filled with yummy food, nice weather, outings and all round happiness retreat into Julie's close curtained and sullen family apartment as the onset of Germany's anti Semitic laws quickly deprive the Jews of the right to dignity, joy, affluence, work, safety, property, happiness, hope and, eventually, life.

The nightmare Vienna of part one is contrasted sharply with the bright colours, oddball characters, romantic scenes, new and yummy foods, linguistic localisms, skyscrapers, humor, rich, poor and and everyone in between in the generally fun filled city of New York. Julie's humor gradually returns as she recovers mentally from the trauma of the Nazi destruction of her life and family. As part two progresses it crescendos into a beautiful description of Julie's new life and the magical city of New York. A strange wonderland that Julie has been lucky enough to find herself in (highlighted through symbolic parallels with 'Alice in Wonderland'). Throughout her recovery in New York however, the specter of the nightmare she ran from hangs over her, and serves to highlight to extent to which Julie was traumatized by her brutalization under the Nazis.
Profile Image for Readersaurus.
1,614 reviews46 followers
October 3, 2013
At first I wasn't sure I liked the main character, Julie, and that was getting in my way. But Denenberg does a good job of establishing the cheerful rhythm of her life in late '30s Vienna and then the sobering change as she begins to become aware of Hitler and his plans for the Jews of Europe. He also clearly makes the point that being assimilated (eating ham, never going to synagogue), being rich, or having a needed profession (medicine) protected no one. I hope that non-Jewish children who read this won't get the impression that all Viennese Jews were so very rich or that all rich people had servants to do everything for them, from bathing and shaving them to raising their children. This book gets only 2 stars b/c the first and second halves of the story are grossly incongruous and provide little resolution for the elementary-age reader. Julie appears to shed her first family easily, becoming (almost without effort) a child star on Broadway. The fates of her family members & friends are settled very briefly in an afterword. Pleh.


"I HATE borrowing books from the library. I don't like being compelled to return them by a certain, specified time. . .All last night I imagined I could hear the book loudly ticking away as I tossed and turned, vainly trying to go to sleep.

TICK TOCK, TICK TOCK, READ ME NOW, OR TAKE ME BACK"

p.29-30
Profile Image for Sara.
62 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2012
I enjoyed the character of Julie because she reminded me a lot of myself at that age (12). She frequently mentions how much she loves to read, and how important books are to her. One quote in particular really jumped out at me:
"I HATE borrowing books from the library. I don't like being compelled to return them by a certain, specified time. . .All last night I imagined I could hear the book loudly ticking away as I tossed and turned, vainly trying to go to sleep.

TICK TOCK, TICK TOCK, READ ME NOW, OR TAKE ME BACK"

As someone who frequently has fines at the library due to keeping things past their due dates - this really resonated with me - as well as making me laugh.

I do question her name, though. Julie does not strike me as an Austrian name. It seems to me a name chosen specifically so that during the story, someone can make fun of her and use her name to point out the fact that she is Jewish by calling her "Jew Lee."
6 reviews
February 16, 2016
I thought this book was very interesting. Although it was depressing, it seems to lighten up a little bit more throughout the story. I like how Julie Weiss followed her dream during this time in the story. She performed in plays like Peter Pan, and also starred in a movie. Although this was a rough time, she became famous during it. She appeared in the new York Times, from being an amazing child actress. There was certain things that I did not enjoy. In the beginning Julie and her family's maid did something so unexpected. She told the guards she was not Jewish. She then pointed out that Julie's mother, father, and brother were. Also another part that I did not like was Julie's mother died froma sickness, way too early in the story. I would recommend this to people, who do not like blood and gore. Also this would be for people who like not-so-horrible endings.
2 reviews1 follower
March 3, 2017
This book is about a girl growing up a Jew and Hitler taking over Austria, the people that Julie once knew as good people turned on them as soon as hitler and his army came. My favorite part is when the army came to where Julie lived because it was full of great delails. I recommend this book to people who like history.
33 reviews
May 9, 2013
I read this to my 8 year old boys in our quest to learn about WWII. They kept asking me to read the book to them and read it in 3 sittings. It is a difficult read-aloud book because some of the passages are just difficult to speak. Reading them is one thing but to say them out loud makes it so much more emotional. The boys agreed that it was sad and cannot imagine living a life the way so many people did during that horrific time. This type of book is a much better way for them to learn about the war than a history book.
Profile Image for ÏŸ·¡±¹±ð±ô²â²ÔÏŸ.
82 reviews
December 21, 2011
Though this book was quite depressing and painful, it was a great book. It made me think of how life would be if we were Julie. How did people handle these horrifying experiences?! Especially when Julie's mother got brutally raped by some soldiers, then later committed suicide. I certainly did shed some tears during the story but I love how the book got to me! All of these encounters were so believable!! That is the painful part of this story. 4 stars **** --Evelyn
Profile Image for Kristi Krumnow.
211 reviews40 followers
May 23, 2024
Another quick, easy read from the junior high classroom. This one is a fictitious diary based on a little girl who was sent by her father from Vienna to NYC to escape the Nazi regime. Her family was Jewish, I think, although it is unclear whether they were categorized enemies of the State, Jewish, protestants, or intellectuals. Her mother, father, and brother see through Hitler's rhetoric. She diaries Hitler's arrival into Vienna, which citizens welcomed with parades and fanfare.
Profile Image for Grace Sophia.
8 reviews
November 28, 2012
This has to be one of my favorite books in this series. It is a very painful story, but is one I always keep coming back to because it is THAT GOOD. The depiction of life is phenomenal and I can connect with Julie's thoughts and emotions on a very personal level. I quote this in my head all the time, and I may need to buy it. WELL WORTH READING!
Profile Image for San Frazier.
230 reviews23 followers
April 2, 2013
so this was a really good story. i found this in my daughters school library. this book is one i think is good for telling mature kids about he horrors of the holocaust in a way that they can understand. i mean it did not sugar coat anything but was written in a way that you really feel for the characters.
Profile Image for Amanda Rehm.
379 reviews4 followers
August 23, 2013
This is a quick and enjoyable read given from the perspective of a 12 year old girl who lived through the holocaust. This is a good holocaust read that takes place in Vienna and America. This is not the typical holocaust/concentration camp read. This shows a different perspective and is a light way of showing how people in other parts of the world viewed this horrible time.
Profile Image for Ari.
8 reviews
April 18, 2014
I loved this book so much, almost my favorite, but it did say the B-word at one point, witch is why it isn't five stars. The whole concept of Hitler is entreating, but I never knew how far it went. I didn't cry during this book like I usually do, but I couldn't put it down. Careful, it scared me to death.
Profile Image for Jerrica.
601 reviews
July 10, 2012
One of the things I remember about this book is bringing it up to the librarian to check it out. She looked at the book, read the title, and let out an "Oh, that sounds sad."

It was pretty sad.
Profile Image for Tori.
7 reviews
October 19, 2013
It was very good, but sad to think about that time, and how people never thought about the person inside the body.
Profile Image for Sara.
460 reviews16 followers
December 27, 2016
It was okay. I feel like parts of it were cliched and rushed but for a younger reader it might be a good introduction to the Holocaust and World War II. Also "Hana's Suitcase" but it's up to you.
Profile Image for Samantha Osborne.
480 reviews47 followers
March 18, 2019
This was a bitter sweet read some of the people who died in this made me cry
Profile Image for Xara Joy.
46 reviews2 followers
May 1, 2023
This book almost made me cry multiple times. It is a great book.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 188 reviews

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