Unraveling the thread of a tangled family history.
Growing up, Klam heard tantalizing stories about Selma, Malvina, Marcella, and Ruth Morris, her first cousins twice removed, who led astonishing lives. According to family lore, they had come to America from Romania in the early 1900s and settled with their parents in St. Louis but soon were put into an orphanage when their mother died in childbirth. Their father promised to return to get them; when he failed to appear, Marcella managed to leave the orphanage and go to work to pay for her siblings’ release. Thereafter, the sisters became inseparable. They moved to New York City, lived in one house together, and finally relocated to Southampton, on Long Island. Most astoundingly, Marcella became a millionaire, donating generously to Brandeis University. When Klam heard the story from various family members, enough contradictions emerged that she decided to investigate. Her breezy family history recounts whatever she could find about the sisters’ lives as well as the surprises and frustrations she encountered during her research. With no training in genealogy or history, the author depended on the generosity of librarians and archivists, whose correspondence she includes. She recounts her travels to St. Louis; Southampton, where the sisters endowed a local library; and Romania, where she found a congenial, helpful guide. She even visited a psychic. Often, she checked in with one of her relatives, whose stories sometimes yielded useful nuggets and sometimes assumptions that Klam discovered were preposterous. Marcella, for example, who apparently became a successful financier, never had an affair with J.P. Morgan, as some in the family believed. Nor did the sisters’ mother die when they were young. Instead, she lived for more than 30 years in an insane asylum in St. Louis, diagnosed with schizophrenia. Klam’s persistent curiosity pays off in a lively portrait of her “weird family.”
An entertaining, rambling journey into the past.