Castles Burning – A Child’s Life in War

$ 20.00

Szerző-Author: Denes, Magda

This steely account of a childhood on the run, first from the Nazis and then as a refugee in postwar Europe, serves as a fitting memorial to the author, who died in December 1996, shortly before the book was published. Magda Denes settled in America and became a psychoanalyst, which may explain her total lack of sentimentality about her youthful self. The fierce emotions of childhood–exacerbated in this case by the danger she faced as a Jew in fascist Hungary–have seldom been better portrayed.

1 készleten

Típus-Type: antikvár
Állapot-Condition: good
Kiadó-Publisher: Simon & Schuster, 1997
Nyelv-Language: english
Oldalszám-Pages: 384
Kötés-Binding: soft cover
Azonosító-Item number: 41-926

Leírás

There are few female figures in literature as riveting as the precocious nine-year-old Magda Denes who narrates this story. Her stubborn self-command and irrepressible awareness of the absurd make her, in her mother’s eyes, „impossibly sarcastic, bigmouthed, insolent, and far too smart” for her own good. When her family goes into hiding from the fascist Arrow-Cross, she is torn from the „castle” of intimacies shared with her adored and adoring older brother and plunged into a world of incomprehensible deprivation, separation, and loss. Her rage, and her ability to feel devastating sorrow and still insist on life, will reach every reader at the core.