Auschwitz Testimonies: 1945-1986
Price : £14.99 & postage in UK £2.50 (or free collection)
Availability : In Stock
Published Date :
01 Jan 2017
Published By
Polity Press
ISBN : 9781509513376
Category : Poetry and Comedy
Format : Paperback
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"One of the most important and gifted writers of our time."
Italo Calvino
"The triumph of human identity and worth over the pathology of human destruction glows virtually everywhere in Levi′s writing ...Time and time again we are moved by his narratives of how men refuse erasure."
Toni Morrison
"Primo Levi′s poise was one of the greatest achievements in the history of the human spirit. His writing restored the honor of humanism after Auschwitz."
Leon Wieseltier
"Whether as witness or imaginative artist, Levi stands high among the truly essential European writers of the past century."
Michael Dirda, Washington Post
"Their unvarnished testimony speaks volumes about the weight of responsibility felt by survivors such as Levi to ensure that the world never forgot the "insane dream of building a thousand–year empire upon millions of corpses and slaves."
The Sydney Morning Herald
"Levi writes of unspeakable things with charity, clarity and objectivity."
Sunday TimesPrimo Levi (1919–87) was born and lived his entire life in or near Turin, with the exception of the years 1944–45, when he was captured as an anti–Fascist partisan, deported to Auschwitz, and then released into war–torn Europe. He was the author of such acclaimed works as If This is a Man, The Periodic Table and The Drowned and the Saved.
Leonardo De Benedetti (1898–1983), also a native of Turin, was captured and deported to Auschwitz in the same year as Levi. After liberation, he resumed his work as a physician.
Italo Calvino
"The triumph of human identity and worth over the pathology of human destruction glows virtually everywhere in Levi′s writing ...Time and time again we are moved by his narratives of how men refuse erasure."
Toni Morrison
"Primo Levi′s poise was one of the greatest achievements in the history of the human spirit. His writing restored the honor of humanism after Auschwitz."
Leon Wieseltier
"Whether as witness or imaginative artist, Levi stands high among the truly essential European writers of the past century."
Michael Dirda, Washington Post
"Their unvarnished testimony speaks volumes about the weight of responsibility felt by survivors such as Levi to ensure that the world never forgot the "insane dream of building a thousand–year empire upon millions of corpses and slaves."
The Sydney Morning Herald
"Levi writes of unspeakable things with charity, clarity and objectivity."
Sunday TimesPrimo Levi (1919–87) was born and lived his entire life in or near Turin, with the exception of the years 1944–45, when he was captured as an anti–Fascist partisan, deported to Auschwitz, and then released into war–torn Europe. He was the author of such acclaimed works as If This is a Man, The Periodic Table and The Drowned and the Saved.
Leonardo De Benedetti (1898–1983), also a native of Turin, was captured and deported to Auschwitz in the same year as Levi. After liberation, he resumed his work as a physician.