|    Login    |    Register

The Mirador

(Paperback, Main)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Mirador

Contributors:

By (Author) Elisabeth Gille

ISBN:

9781590174449

Publisher:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Imprint:

NYRB Classics

Publication Date:

6th September 2011

UK Publication Date:

25th October 2011

Edition:

Main

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

843.912

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 14mm, Height 203mm, Spine 128mm

Weight:

269g

Description

A New York Review Books Original. When Irene Nemirovsky's Suite Francaise was first published, the world discovered a new great writer. Even in France, however, Nemirovsky had been more or less forgotten for years, until her youngest daughter Elisabeth Gille, only five years old when her mother died in Auschwitz, wrote a book to bring her back to life. In 1992 Gille published this fictionalized autobiography of the acclaimed novelist, who had led a sparkling life in Paris as one of the most successful and prolific European writers of the 1930s before being arrested as a Jew and led to her death in 1942. In the first section of the book, Irene looks back from 1929, the year of her first triumph with David Golder, to her privileged upbringing in Kiev and Saint Petersburg, the precocious only child of a warm, generous father and a vicious, preening, and distant mother. The family escapes Revolutionary Russia to arrive in France, a country of "moderation, freedom, and generosity" that Irene will embrace as her own. In the book's second half, the writer and her husband and two children have fled Paris for a small provincial town in Burgundy, where they must wear the yellow Star of David, come to some accommodation with the occupying German troops, and plead in vain with Irene's illustrious fair-weather champions to intercede on the assimilated family's behalf. She now sees her earlier self as vain and credulous, blinded by her success to the horribly changing political situation, but it is too late. As fully and deeply imagined as Irene Nemirovsky's novels, Gille's memoires revees will also prove indispensable to devotees of the nearly forgotten author for the fascinating new light it sheds on her life and work.

Reviews

A lively, elegantly written portrait of a woman who lived and wrote through tumultous times. TLS 'An unnervingly enlightening and revealing study of Irene Nemirovsky written as the imagined autobiography she never wrote, by a stranger who was also her daughter.' Irish Times

Author Bio

Elisabeth Gille (1937-1996) was born in Paris to the banker Michel Epstein and the novelist Irene Nemirovsky. She spent most of her career as an editor and translator before her first book, Le Mirador, appeared and was immediately acclaimed as a major work. Marina Harss is a translator and dance writer in New York City. Recent translations include Elizabeth Subercaseaux's A Week in October, Alberto Moravia's Conjugal Love and Pier Paolo Pasolini's Stories From the City of God.

See all

Other titles by Elisabeth Gille

See all

Other titles from The New York Review of Books, Inc