Bitter Herbs: Based on a true story of a Jewish girl in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands
By (Author) Marga Minco
Ebury Publishing
Ebury Press
17th September 2020
17th September 2020
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Biographical fiction / autobiographical fiction
Second World War fiction
Autobiography: writers
Second World War
839.313
Paperback
160
Width 126mm, Height 198mm, Spine 12mm
140g
A short autobiographical novel about a young Jewish girl in the 1940s from an acclaimed Dutch writer which has been compared to Anne Frank's Diary 'The evening the men came I fled through the garden gate.' The Netherlands, World War II When the Nazis invade the Netherlands in May 1940 it's clear that life is changing for the girl and her family. Step by step, the Nazis close in on the Dutch Jews. But when the authorities finally come to the family home a split decision will have devastating consequences. Marga Minco's autobiographical novel Bitter Herbs is a Dutch classic that has been translated into more than fifteen languages. This deceptively simple and profoundly moving tale is now reissued with a new translation by Jeannette K Ringold.
The familys incorrigible optimism enhances the nightmarish effect of this impressive little book. Moving and memorable. * The Times Literary Supplement *
The simplicity and complete naivet of Marga Mincos account sharpen the impression it makes. * The Jewish Chronicle *
Marga Minco (1920) debuted with Bitter Herbs (1957), which was followed by other famous works such as The Fall (1983) and An Empty House (1967). She won the Vijverberg prize (1957), the Annie Romein Prize (1999), the Constantijn Huygen Prize (2005) and the P.C. Hooft Prize (2019) for her entire oeuvre.