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The Voice of Memory

Interviews 1961 - 1987

The Voice of Memory( )
Author: Levi, Primo
Editor: Belpoliti, Marco
Edited and Translated by: Gordon, Robert
ISBN:978-0-7456-2149-4
Publication Date:Dec 2000
Publisher:Polity Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $95.00
Book Description:

Over the course of more than twenty-five years, Primo Levi gave more than two hundred newspaper, journal, radio and television interviews speaking with such varied authors as Philip Roth and Germaine Greer. Marco Belpoliti and Robert Gordon have selected and translated thirty-six of the most important of these interviews for The Voice of Memory.

Book Details
Pages:336
Detailed Subjects: Biography & Autobiography / Literary Figures
Literary Criticism / European / Italian
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.162 x 9.212 x 0.932 Inches
Book Weight:1.316 Pounds
Author Biography
Levi, Primo (Author)
Primo Levi was born on July 31, 1919 in Turin, Italy. He pursued a career in chemistry, and spent the early years World War II as a research chemist in Milan. Upon the German invasion of northern Italy, Levi, an Italian Jew, joined an anti-fascist group and was captured and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. He was able to survive the camp, due in part to his value to the Nazis as a chemist.

After the war ended, Levi did chemistry work in a Turin paint factory while beginning his writing career. His first book, If This Is a Man (title later was changed to Survival in Auschwitz) was published in 1947 and its sequel, The Truce (later retitled The Reawakening) came out in 1958. These two books recount Levi's story of surviving concentration camp life.

Levi also published poetry, short stories, and novels, some under the pen name Damianos Malabaila. His 1985, largely autobiographical work, The Periodic Table, cemented his world fame. Awards in tribute to his writing included the Kenneth B. Smilen fiction award, presented by the Jewish Museum in New York.

Ironically, despite his surviving Auschwitz, Primo Levi appears to have died by suicide, in Turin on April 11, 1987.

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