Description

Book Synopsis
A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
A BookPage Best Book of the Year

"This exquisitely written book shows how recovery can come generations later through rebuilding connections—to people, the natural world, the past." —Robin Shulman, Washington Post

Trade Review
"Thoughtful and eloquent.…Verzemnieks is solid on her history. Even more, she offers a model for how to navigate it. When she reaches the limit of what she can know, she doesn't confuse it with the limit of what can be known." -- David Bezmozgis - New York Times Book Review
"Verzemnieks’s account is personal, but by writing about national identity and asylum her book addresses our most urgent political questions. It insists with quiet elegance that, though the past eludes us, we cannot elude our past." -- Sarah Ditum - Guardian
"In her elegiac new book, [Verzemnieks] describes how she hoped the faraway travels would restore her grandmother to her ‘in the old stories’ that still existed there.…Ultimately, what she found was even broader: the meaning of home, the power of stories, and the different ways survivors and their memories move forward." -- Rebekah Denn - Christian Science Monitor
"Verzemnieks…is a gracious writer, inviting the readers on her journey into the past.…Armed with her wealth of knowledge in Latvian history and myths, and her masterful and lush observations, Verzemnieks remains an able guide, earning our undivided attention and admiration." -- Angela Ajayi - Minneapolis Star Tribune
"[Verzemnieks] writes as if she’s recounting a fable, and fills the pages with werewolves and phantom villages and barons and journeys undertaken by simple men and women, in fairytale tones, lush language, the contrast between her prose and the tale it tells devastating in its crushing polarity." -- Kerri Arsenault - Brooklyn Rail
"Extraordinarily tender and finely wrought." -- Eliza Griswold, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of Amity and Prosperity
"An exquisite book for the ages as it unfolds from its first mysterious sentence into a masterpiece about war, survival, memory, and, most movingly of all, human need." -- David Finkel, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of The Good Soldiers
"In this moving, lyrical memoir that draws on vivid personal accounts and extensive research, Inara Verzemnieks does not shirk from confronting the extremities of human behavior; but she also gives us the rich textures of a world in which poetic mythology coexists with sophisticated modernity, the dead mingle with the living, and the hardships of a traumatic past are countered by the strength of memory and of lasting attachments." -- Eva Hoffman, author of Exit into History
"The astute reportorial sensitivity of a master Eastern European historian like Timothy Snyder, as filtered through the lyric sensibility of a García Márquez, and suffused with the aching nostalgia of a latter-day Proust." -- Lawrence Weschler, author of And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?
"Poetic, melancholy, colored by the dark beauty of the northern landscape Inara Verzemnieks inhabits (much more than merely describes), this memoir of loss and recovery from the tragedies of the twentieth century will linger in your imagination, widen your historical perspective, and make you grateful that language has such power." -- D. J. Waldie, author of Holy Land: A Suburban Memoir

Among the Living and the Dead A Tale of Exile and

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    A Paperback / softback by Inara Verzemnieks

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      View other formats and editions of Among the Living and the Dead A Tale of Exile and by Inara Verzemnieks

      Publisher: WW Norton & Co
      Publication Date: 04/12/2018
      ISBN13: 9780393356199, 978-0393356199
      ISBN10: 0393356191

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
      A BookPage Best Book of the Year

      "This exquisitely written book shows how recovery can come generations later through rebuilding connections—to people, the natural world, the past." —Robin Shulman, Washington Post

      Trade Review
      "Thoughtful and eloquent.…Verzemnieks is solid on her history. Even more, she offers a model for how to navigate it. When she reaches the limit of what she can know, she doesn't confuse it with the limit of what can be known." -- David Bezmozgis - New York Times Book Review
      "Verzemnieks’s account is personal, but by writing about national identity and asylum her book addresses our most urgent political questions. It insists with quiet elegance that, though the past eludes us, we cannot elude our past." -- Sarah Ditum - Guardian
      "In her elegiac new book, [Verzemnieks] describes how she hoped the faraway travels would restore her grandmother to her ‘in the old stories’ that still existed there.…Ultimately, what she found was even broader: the meaning of home, the power of stories, and the different ways survivors and their memories move forward." -- Rebekah Denn - Christian Science Monitor
      "Verzemnieks…is a gracious writer, inviting the readers on her journey into the past.…Armed with her wealth of knowledge in Latvian history and myths, and her masterful and lush observations, Verzemnieks remains an able guide, earning our undivided attention and admiration." -- Angela Ajayi - Minneapolis Star Tribune
      "[Verzemnieks] writes as if she’s recounting a fable, and fills the pages with werewolves and phantom villages and barons and journeys undertaken by simple men and women, in fairytale tones, lush language, the contrast between her prose and the tale it tells devastating in its crushing polarity." -- Kerri Arsenault - Brooklyn Rail
      "Extraordinarily tender and finely wrought." -- Eliza Griswold, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of Amity and Prosperity
      "An exquisite book for the ages as it unfolds from its first mysterious sentence into a masterpiece about war, survival, memory, and, most movingly of all, human need." -- David Finkel, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of The Good Soldiers
      "In this moving, lyrical memoir that draws on vivid personal accounts and extensive research, Inara Verzemnieks does not shirk from confronting the extremities of human behavior; but she also gives us the rich textures of a world in which poetic mythology coexists with sophisticated modernity, the dead mingle with the living, and the hardships of a traumatic past are countered by the strength of memory and of lasting attachments." -- Eva Hoffman, author of Exit into History
      "The astute reportorial sensitivity of a master Eastern European historian like Timothy Snyder, as filtered through the lyric sensibility of a García Márquez, and suffused with the aching nostalgia of a latter-day Proust." -- Lawrence Weschler, author of And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?
      "Poetic, melancholy, colored by the dark beauty of the northern landscape Inara Verzemnieks inhabits (much more than merely describes), this memoir of loss and recovery from the tragedies of the twentieth century will linger in your imagination, widen your historical perspective, and make you grateful that language has such power." -- D. J. Waldie, author of Holy Land: A Suburban Memoir

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