"Part memoir, part comparative psychology, part humor anthology, Laughing All the Way to Freedom is a fascinating delight. While recalling his early and lasting impressions of his adopted country, Draitser subjects his own formidable oeuvre as a satirical author - both pre- and post-emigration - to an insightful re-examination. While revisiting these wonderful texts, he gives us a sincere and illuminating retrospective account of the immigrant experience, including the mixed joy and apprehension of unexpectedly being able to visit his homeland (and beloved city of Odessa) again, after having found the courage to leave it forever. The recent and ongoing terrible events in Ukraine and Russia give the book an additional, almost unbearable poignancy."
- Dr. Seth Graham University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies
"American readers of Draitser's book will enjoy observing the 'clash of cultures' in one person's consciousness—a consciousness characteristic of practically all who moved to the US after being socialized in the environment of Russian culture. {...] Your old collectivist, authoritarian culture is stuck to you like a piece of chewing gum to the sole of your shoex"
- V. Kustanovich, Vanderbilt University
"Laughing All the Way to Freedom is Emil Draitser's candid analysis of his 'road to Americanization,' which, as every immigrant knows, is always long and never straightforward. A satirist in Soviet Russia, Draitser intermingles his published pieces with his moving experiences in search of a new identity in the United States. With the skillful pairing of fiction and memoir, the book's authenticity is hard-earned. A captivating read '''"
- Elena Gorokhova, the author of A Train to Moscow
"Everything about this remarkably engaging collection of essays -- by turns poignant and funny, and deeply thoughtful and thought-provoking throughout -- rings true, because it is true. At the heart of it, these keen ruminations on the nature of exile and an emigre's discovery of America are unwaveringly authentic."
- Mikhail Iossel, Concordia University, Montreal (Canada)
"Poignant as it is warm and kind, generous to and appreciative of the country that gave him a new start in life, Draitser's extraordinary immigration memoir reveals truths about the ways that culture shapes identity more than we can possibly know. The American-born readers will come to see their own culture and social mores from an outsider's perspective. Distinctly individual, the memoir is convincingly universal and supportive of all those brave souls who make the journey to our shores, be they from Asia, Africa, or Latin America.
- Benjamin Rifkin, Dean of the Maxwell Becton College of Arts and Sciences, Fairleigh Dickinson University