Memoir Talk: The Wanderers by Daniela Gerson
Schedule
Thu Apr 23 2026 at 07:00 pm to 08:00 pm
UTC-07:00Location
Village Well Books & Coffee | Culver City, CA
About this Event
Join us for a conversation with Daniela Gerson, author of the new memoir The Wanderers: A Story of Exile, Survival, and Unexpected Love in the Shadow of World War II!
Daniela will be joined by Héctor Tobar (Our Migrant Souls) to discuss family heritage, how we remember history, and the relevance of refugee stories today.
About the participants:
Daniela Gerson is an associate professor of journalism at California State University, Northridge and editor-at-large at Zócalo Public Square. She previously worked as a community engagement editor at the LA Times and as a staff immigration reporter for the New York Sun.
Héctor Tobar is the author of six books published in fifteen languages, including, Our Migrant Souls: A Meditation on Race and the Meanings and Myths of Latino, published by MCD/Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
About the book:
An immigration journalist and her wife trace their family’s intertwined past to unearth a history of how hundreds of thousands of Polish Jews survived Hitler’s Holocaust at the brutal hands of Stalin—a story that sheds light on the enduring power of hope and love.
Daniela Gerson and her wife, Talia Inlender, met at a picnic in Los Angeles, not knowing that 75 years earlier, their grandparents had left homes only blocks away from each other in a small Polish town, and fled east to Ukraine. The Gersons and the Inlenders would go on parallel odysseys of 5,000 miles to survive the Holocaust—journeys that would, after a deceitful loyalty test from Stalin, put them on cattle cars to a Soviet Gulag, trap them for years in limbo in Central Asia, and would end, after a decade on the run, with new lives built on secrets and lies.
For years, Daniela and Talia simply accepted this painful shared history as a sign that they were b’shert, meant to be. Their families’ refugee past fueled their work: Daniela as an immigration journalist; Talia an immigration attorney. But as Daniela uncovered more, she realized that their grandparents shared this escape path in the Soviet Union with most Polish Jews who survived; a group—sometimes collectively called “the Wanderers”—that is almost entirely absent from popular understanding of World War II. And unlike most Holocaust sagas that focus on the exceptionality of the Nazi genocide, theirs was also a universal story of refugees making impossible decisions when forced to seek safety, protect their children, and find new homes.
This is a story that, to the dismay of the world, remains relevant each time a political upheaval wreaks havoc on individual lives. Part genealogical detective story, part gripping history, part contemporary reporting on war-torn territories, The Wanderers chronicles Daniela’s journey to unearth this past with her wife, and reveal its echoes in still-contested lands from Ukraine to Israel.
The Wanderers is a groundbreaking narrative history, and a meditation on how a home left behind and a desperate journey to survive reverberates across borders and through generations.
Where is it happening?
Village Well Books & Coffee, 9900 Culver Boulevard, Culver City, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
USD 0.00







