Until now, Augusto Segre's memoir had been a little-known treasure trove of first-hand information, from minute details to big ideas, about a bygone era in the history of Italian Jewry and its important tradition of cultural pluralism. Spanning local history and global concerns, the events narrated in this volume touch on personal, communal and national events that are both captivating and far too relevant to the status of minorities in today's world. Augusto Segre's work reads like a collection of poems. Its core is personal experience, a Jew's perspective on daily life and characters in the Italian countryside, which is itself a lively gallery of portraits of the past, but the writing broadens into an understanding of the nuances of human experience. To add to this, Segre's pages afford a rare compelling glimpse of nineteenth-century Italian Judaism and Jewry. Stories of Jewish Life is straightforward, well written, and illuminative for both the scholar and the general reader.