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Binding: PaperbackDewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780156034746 Edition: 1 ISBN: 0156034743 Label: Harvest Books Manufacturer: Harvest Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 400 Publication Date: August 04, 2008 Publisher: Harvest Books Studio: Harvest Books Editorial Review: Product Description: From one of Spain's most celebrated writers, an extraordinary, inspired book—at once fiction, history, and memoir—that draws on the Sephardic diaspora, the Holocaust, and Stalin's purges to tell a twentieth-century story. Shifting seamlessly from the past to the present and following the routes of escape across countries and continents, Muñoz Molina evokes people real and imagined who come together in a richly allusive pattern—from Eugenia Ginsburg to Grete Buber-Neumann, the one on a train to the gulag, the other heading toward a Nazi concentration camp; from a shoemaker and a nun who become lovers in a small Spanish town to Primo Levi bound for Auschwitz. From the well known to the virtually unknown—all of Molina's characters are voices of separation, nostalgia, love, and endless waiting. Written with clarity of vision and passion, in a style both lyrical and accessible, Sepharad makes the experience our own. A brilliant achievement. Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Amazing, compelling and deeply movingSepharad, the modern Hebrew for Spain, is unlike any other book I have ever read. And, it is extraordinary. Munoz Molina, a highly respected, award-winning Spanish writer, has written a novel comprising 17 short novellas; each stands on its own and, yet, there are interwoven themes and characters throughout. The book is told in a variety of narrative voices; sometimes it is Molina himself -- the writer writing about the writing of this book -- and sometimes it is an unknown voice telling a story ... Read More Rating: - What You Expected Is Not What You Will FindFrom everything I had read about this book, it was a novel relating how jews who had been expelled from Spain in 1492 (the Sefardim) faired during the second world war and were affected by the Shoah. Though there are two stories about people going to Auschwitz and one about going to the Gulag (and the comparison of how little difference between Hitler and Stalin), most of the stories relate to a man who used to live in a small town in central Spain, and some people he knew or made up to be from ... Read More Rating: - A poignant refection on totalitarianism and exileSepharad is a thoughtful and poignant embodiment of the consequences of totalitarianism in various forms in 20th century Europe, of the exile from roots and from the self that totaiatrinism creates, and of exile in general. Technically it is remarkable for fluid changes of point of view. In the same page a character may be called he, ("He watched us from his balcony", I, ("I returned to my balcony...") and you ("You look down form your balcony on the family across the street.") - all so smoothly ... Read More Rating: - Uplifting stories of exile and lossMunoz Molina has crafted an utterly brilliant novel that weaves a number of different stories together into a tapestry both sad beyond words and strangely uplifting. His work evoked memories of Solzhenitsyn's finest passages about life in Satlin's camps. Munoz Molina demonstrates how the human spirit can rise above degredation and despair to find dignity and hope. A wonderful achievement. Rating: - A Profound AchievementI've never read anything quite like Sepharad. I thought a bit about W.G. Sebald's work while reading this wonderful book, however, Munoz Molina -- or his exceptional translator -- is more of a poet. The stories that comprise this novel are all about displacement -- enforced and circumstantial -- in a way that is clearly unique to post-WW II Europe. They are stories of wandering while standing still. I was very moved by the book and intend to recommend it to all of the intelligent readers in my ... Read More |