The key novel about the Armenian Genocide - an enthralling, crackling historical epic.
Franz Werfel (born 1890) was already a successful writer when in 1933 he published The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, inspired by the desperate plight of Armenian children he had seen working in a Syrian carpet factory. A bestseller and Werfel's masterpiece, the book brought the Armenian genocide to the world's attention for the first time but was burned by the Nazis. Werfel, an Austrian Jew, was forced to flee Europe, narrowly escaping with his life. He died in Los Angeles in 1945.
Forty Days will invade your senses and keep the blood pounding.
Once read, it will never be forgotten
*The New York Times*
In every sense a true and thrilling novel... It tells a story which
it is almost one's duty as an intelligent human being to read. And
one's duty here becomes one's pleasure also
*New York Times Book Review*
Werfel's book ... did more than the efforts of any diplomat,
journalist, or historian to encourage speech about the unspeakable.
It arrives today as a timely reminder that savagery thrives in
silence
*The Barnes and Noble Review*
A crackling read. Symphonic in its handling of profound themes,
respectful of its most vacillating characters, Werfel's novel is a
grand and satisfying story about the necessities and difficulties
of leadership
*Booklist*
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