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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nick BarlayPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Tauris Parke Weight: 0.545kg ISBN: 9780755626991ISBN 10: 0755626990 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 16 April 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Uncertain ![]() Stock levels are unknown and need to be verified with the supplier. Table of Contents1. Ghosts The Knock The Night The Road 2. Men The disappearance of a father The coming of Uncle Jozsi The anatomy of a massacre 3. Women The memory of paper The slipping of a wig Barefoot from the wilderness 4. 1956 A revolution in a family An accidental country A change of identities 5. Parallel Lives A tale of two doors A knock from history A postcard from a Fascist A disappearing world Acknowledgements Glossary Illustrations Select Bibliography IndexReviews'Between fact and fiction, archival research and genealogy, Nick Barlay re-enacts the torments of Hungarian Jewish history from the Holocaust to 1956 and to exile in London, where he was born to refugee parents. He takes us to the margins and the cracks, the streets, the houses and the cellars. His tale is an astonishing tour de force, it is a memorial to the unsung heroes through the prism of his family: compelling and informative, deeply moving and scrupulously understated.' -- Irene Heidelberger-Leonard, author of THE PHILOSOPHER OF AUSCHWITZ 'An intriguing and moving narrative. Barlay writes calmly, but with feeling. The fortunes of a Jewish family during the Holocaust and the Communist rule in Hungary come across powerfully and ultimately with a dash of optimism' -- Ladislaus Loeb, Emeritus Professor of German, University of Sussex, and author of Dealing with Satan: Rezso Kasztner's Daring Rescue Mission 'Is it family history? It is. Is it poetry? It is that, too - charming poetry. But clouds soon darken the scene. There's the smell of blood and the tumult of Arrow Cross pogroms. What binds these family fates together is fine writing - and Hungarian cherry strudel.' -- Peter Fraenkel, translator, broadcaster and author of No Fixed Abode: A Jewish Odyssey to Africa Between fact and fiction, archival research and genealogy, Nick Barlay re-enacts the torments of Hungarian Jewish history from the Holocaust to 1956 and to exile in London, where he was born to refugee parents. He takes us to the margins and the cracks, the streets, the houses and the cellars. His tale is an astonishing tour de force, it is a memorial to the unsung heroes through the prism of his family: compelling and informative, deeply moving and scrupulously understated. -- Irène Heidelberger-Leonard, author of 'The Philosopher of Auschwitz' An intriguing and moving narrative. Barlay writes calmly, but with feeling. The fortunes of a Jewish family during the Holocaust and the Communist rule in Hungary come across powerfully and ultimately with a dash of optimism. -- Ladislaus Löb, Emeritus Professor of German, University of Sussex, and author of 'Dealing with Satan: Rezso Kasztner’s Daring Rescue Mission' Is it family history? It is. Is it poetry? It is that, too – charming poetry. But clouds soon darken the scene. There’s the smell of blood and the tumult of Arrow Cross pogroms. What binds these family fates together is fine writing – and Hungarian cherry strudel. -- Peter Fraenkel, translator, broadcaster and author of 'No Fixed Abode: A Jewish Odyssey to Africa' Author InformationNick Barlay is the author of four acclaimed novels and was named as one of Granta's 20 best young British novelists in 2003, until it was discovered he was too old to be young. Born in London to Hungarian Jewish refugee parents, he has also written award-winning radio plays, short stories and wide-ranging journalism. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |