Primo Levi was born in Turin in 1919 and trained as a chemist. Arrested as a member of the anti-fascist resistance during the war, he was deported to Auschwitz. His experiences there are described in his two classic autobiographical works, If This is a Man and The Truce. He also wrote a number of universally highly acclaimed novels and essay collections, including If Not Now, When?, Moments of Reprieve and The Wrench. The Drowned and the Saved, Levi's impassioned attempt to understand the 'rationale' behind the concentration camps, was completed shortly before his tragic death in Turin in 1987.
The death of Primo Levi robs Italy of one of its finest writers . .
. One of the few survivors of the Holocaust to speak of his
experiences with a gentle voice
*Guardian*
Levi's voice is especially affecting, so clear, firm and gentle,
yet humane and apparently untouched by anger, bitterness or
self-pity. If This Is a Man is miraculous, finding the human in
every individual who traverses its pages, whether a Häftling
(prisoner) or Muselmann ("the weak, the inept, those doomed to
selection"), a kapo or a guard.
*Philippe Sands*
With the moral stamina and intellectual poise of a
twentieth-century Titan, this slightly built, dutiful, unassuming
chemist set out systematically to remember the German hell on
earth, steadfastly to think it through, and then to render it
comprehensible in lucid, unpretentious prose... One of the greatest
human testaments of the era
*Philip Roth*
There are other Holocaust testimonies, but Levi's is the first, and
the most focused... Written before the genre existed, it reads more
straightforwardly like a record... It is a meticulously presented
diary of hell
*David Baddiel*
[What] gave it such power... was the sheer, unmitigated truth of
it; the sense of what a book could achieve in terms of expanding
one's own knowledge and understanding at a single sitting... few
writers have left such a legacy... A necessary book
*Independent*
A life-changing book
*Daily Express*
Among the best literature of the twentieth century
*Atlantic*
A powerful reminder of what it means to be human
*The Conversation*
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