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The first thing I did
when picking up this book is rip off the Oprah sticker from the cover.
Really, does this woman need any more free promotion? Plus, it clashed
with my skirt. Okay, just because Miss O likes the thing doesn't mean
it's necessarily a "women's" book, but her choices (The
Road and A Million Little
Pieces, ironically, amongst my other O reads) tend to be emotional
and in some way gut wrenching. This was no exception....
I try my hardest to imagine what it was like to be a prisoner in one
of the concentration camps during the Holocaust, and despite having
that pain somewhere in my DNA, I can't for the life of me conceptualize
the horror. To be treated so subhumanly, to witness such an utter
lack of disregard for human life is shocking beyond anything I can
grasp. How this could happen is just too much.
That said, Wiesel manages to bring his story of survival in the camps
to a level that makes the experience more concrete, somehow more real
than the sweeping macro views that we get from movies or documentaries
on the subject. Wiesel does that weird thing that a lot of Yiddish
writers do; they create such a strange sense of passive defiance and
incredulous whatever in their characters that even when they're being
tortured and persecuted to the limit of reality, you just want to
snack the shit out of them. It’s a difficult thing to put into
words, but for some reason their complaining is annoying in a weird
way, despite the fact any of us going through the same thing would
be a crying heap on the ground. Maybe it's just because I see a little
of myself in all of these folks.
I don't need to rehash the whole Holocaust story, or the reasons for
it, for anyone, and Wiesel figures he doesn't either. Oddly enough
the story is both an insanely personal one of a father and son trying
to survive Nazi atrocities, as well as one that he could apply to
any number of "survivors," or really any number of human
horrors throughout the years. His wife alludes to this as much in
her forward (of afterward) outlining her new translation. This is
a short, albeit gripping true tale about love and survival and a time
that shaped a people a nation and apparently a whole bunch of Oprah-maniacs.
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