The Memory Monster
Yishai Sarid
* Affiliatelinks/Werbelinks
Links auf reinlesen.de sind sogenannte Affiliate-Links. Wenn du auf so einen Affiliate-Link klickst und über diesen Link einkaufst, bekommt reinlesen.de von dem betreffenden Online-Shop oder Anbieter eine Provision. Für dich verändert sich der Preis nicht.
Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien
Beschreibung
“A brilliant short novel that serves as a brave, sharp-toothed brief against letting the past devour the present” (The New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice), Yishai Sarid’s The Memory Monster is a harrowing parable of a young historian who becomes consumed by the memory of the Holocaust.
A NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW 100 NOTABLE BOOKS OF 2020 SELECTION
Written as a report to the chairman of Yad Vashem, Israel’s memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, our unnamed narrator recounts his own undoing. Hired as a promising young historian, he soon becomes a leading expert on Nazi methods of extermination at concentration camps in Poland during World War II and guides tours through the sites for students and visiting dignitaries. He hungrily devours every detail of life and death in the camps and takes pride in being able to recreate for his audience the excruciating last moments of the victims’ lives.
The job becomes a mission, and then an obsession. Spending so much time immersed in death, his connections with the living begin to deteriorate. He resents the students lost in their iPhones, singing sentimental songs, not expressing sufficient outrage at the genocide committed by the Nazis. In fact, he even begins to detect, in the students as well as himself, a hint of admiration for the murderers—their efficiency, audacity, and determination. Force is the only way to resist force, he comes to think, and one must be prepared to kill.
With the perspicuity of Kafka’s The Trial and the obsessions of Delillo’s White Noise, The Memory Monster confronts difficult questions that are all too relevant to Israel and the world today: How do we process human brutality? What makes us choose sides in conflict? And how do we honor the memory of horror without becoming consumed by it?
Kundenbewertungen
death camp, Nuremberg, Warsaw, Doctor Mengele, Israeli fiction, books about the Holocaust, Holocaust novels, Warsaw Cemetery, Israeli authors, Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum, kapo, Nazis, Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva, contemporary Jewish fiction, Yad Vashem, Holocaust fiction, Jews and Germans, Judenrat, Auschwitz, Jewish authors, Final Solution, Jerusalem, Chelmno, Sonderkommando, Nazi death camps, Holocaust Memorial, Poland, the Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations, Belzec camp, Auschwitz Museum, Majdanek, Righteous Among the Nations, Israeli novels, Jewish slaves, Kanada Warehouse, Holocaust scholar, concentration camps, Sobibor Extermination Camp, Birkenau, Israeli novelists, Treblinka, Israelis and Germans, modern Jewish fiction, Arbeit Macht Frei