“A moving story of finding oneself through a lifetime of travel, this will be a terrific addition to memoir and Judaica collections.”
-- Olga Wise Library Journal
“A heartfelt witness to the changing political and emotional landscape of the Cuban-American experience.”
-- Kirkus Reviews
“All those intrigued by their ancestral story will be moved by the personal quest and also by how—with the help of computers as well as the kindness of strangers—the lost can find their way home.”
-- Hazel Rochman Booklist
"Traveling Heavy is the product of a poetic mind, and the work itself can be regarded as prose poetry. Behar has not recovered from her ‘interrupted childhood’ in Havana, and it is this tragedy that makes her who she is, that shapes the ghosts she pursues, that has guided her steps as a subjective anthropologist; and that is able to offer the reader a smorgasbord of literary delights."
-- Marion Fischel Jerusalem Post
“So much of Ruth Behar’s life story resonates with me. My mother is Cuban, and to paraphrase Winston Churchill, I may be half Cuban and half American, but there are so many times I feel completely Cuban. When I finally went to Cuba last fall, it was like returning to a place to which I had never been. I am the Cubana that Ruth Behar describes in her fascinating new memoir, Traveling Heavy: A Memoir in Between Journeys,’ one that is part of an ‘intensely diasporic people.’”
-- Judy Bolton-Fasman Boston Globe
“In writing, the distance between the world and the self collapses, and the latter becomes a medium through which the former can be understood; the world becomes a function of the self. Thus, writing becomes the solution to the search for identity. Like Kafka, Behar takes part in self-creation. Through the act of composing a memoir about her search, she writes t
Add he lost homeland and the lost self into existence.”
-- Jane Shmidt Bookslut
“Ruth Behar’s latest work, Traveling Heavy: A Memoir in between Journeys, is a book filled with grace; it is anthropologically contoured text that has legs. It has breadth, for its compelling narratives will attract a diverse audience of readers who will pour through the pages, delighting in the poignant details underscored by Behar’s life as a person who travels with burdens of past and present. It also has depth, for Traveling Heavy is a book that will remain open to the world, a work that will be savored for many years to come.”
-- Paul Stoller Anthropological Research
“Cuban-American anthropologist Ruth Behar avoids the polarizing politics so typical of Cuban exiles to write an affecting memoir about how notions of home and displacement in relation to the Cuban revolution have shaped her life, and describes the experiences of finding her 'own' Cuba, a version of the island that differs from that of her parents and their generation of exiles. Behar’s memoir will be of particular interest to Jewish readers, as she recounts her family’s search for safety and home in Cuba and the changing identity of Cuba’s own Jewish community over the years since the revolution.”
-- Julie Schwietert Collazo The Guardian
"Traveling Heavy is an engaging read whether you’re approaching it as a memoir of the influential storyteller and anthropologist Ruth Behar; a set of vignettes about belonging while living through hybridity as a Jewish Cuban American woman whose family emigrated from Spain and Poland; or a place-based ethnography teasing out the everydayness of moving through space . . . . For academics, and for feminist geographers in particular, it is one of those books that makes you think about how space and place are implicated both in the way we journey through the world and the way we think about it. If you think about any of these things, Traveling Heavy is well worth the read."
-- Pamela Moss Gender, Place & Culture