A cinquante ans, Bruno Brumhart revient sur sa vie. Une enfance confortable, chérie par ses parents, des juifs communistes, un mystérieux accident dont il n'a aucun souvenir et qui l'a privé d'une main, et l'innommable : le ghetto, la déportation, sa fuite du camp et son errance dans la forêt. Comment retourner dans un monde qui a ordonné, ou laissé faire, la destruction des siens ? Bruno sait que seule la force d'une profonde fraternité peut apporter la dignité indispensable pour survivre. Il décide alors de transformer un château, qu'il a acheté près de Naples, en lieu d'accueil pour les autres survivants, d'en faire une "étape" sur le chemin du retour.
Aharon Appelfeld Livres
Aharon Appelfeld est largement célébré pour ses contributions profondes à la littérature, explorant les complexités de l'expérience humaine avec une profondeur et une nuance exceptionnelles. Son vaste corpus d'œuvres explore des thèmes tels que la mémoire, l'identité et la survie, souvent sur fond de bouleversements historiques. La prose distinctive d'Appelfeld se caractérise par sa qualité lyrique et sa capacité à évoquer de fortes émotions, rendant ses récits à la fois poignants et inoubliables. Il est reconnu mondialement pour ses réalisations littéraires significatives et son impact durable sur la fiction contemporaine.







Quand la mère d'Adam le conduit dans la forêt, elle promet de venir le chercher le soir même. "Aie confiance, tu connais la forêt et tout ce qu'elle contient", lui dit-elle. Mais comment avoir confiance alors que la guerre se déchaîne, que les rafles se succèdent dans le ghetto et que les enfants juifs sont pourchassés ? La journée passe. Adam retrouve Thomas, un garçon de sa classe que sa mère est également venue cacher là. Les deux gamins sont différents et complémentaires : Adam sait grimper aux arbres et se repère dans la forêt comme s'il y était né. Thomas est réfléchi et craintif. A la nuit tombée, les mères ne sont pas revenues. Les enfants s'organisent et construisent un nid dans un arbre. Ils ignorent encore qu'ils passeront de longs mois ainsi, affrontant la faim, la pluie, la neige et le vent, sans oublier les questions essentielles : qu'est-ce que le courage ? Comment parlent les animaux ? D'où vient la haine? A quoi sert l'amour?
L'Amour, soudain
- 231pages
- 9 heures de lecture
" Une nuit il rêva qu'Iréna portait l'uniforme de l'armée rouge. Ils étaient ensemble dans une jeep qui fonçait à toute allure. La course s'arrêta soudain, Iréna descendit de la jeep, ôta ses bottes et dévoila un pied parfait. Ernest en fut si ému qu'il s'agenouilla et dit : "Le capitaine Ernest Blumenfeld vous demande l'autorisation d'embrasser la plante de votre pied", et sans attendre de réponse il inclina la tête et s'exécuta. " Un écrivain à l'automne de sa vie, une jeune fille dévouée : l'idylle n'est pas nouvelle. D'où vient alors le choc que procure un tel livre ? Au-delà de la banalité apparente, Aharon Appelfeld donne à ce récit une grandeur proprement biblique. Parce que la rencontre d'Ernest et d'Iréna est un événement qui les dépasse, elle devient le révélateur qui permet à chacun d'accéder au sens secret de son existence, devenue enfin déchiffrable. Une vie politique, inscrite dans l'Histoire - celle d'un siècle hanté par le totalitarisme et la destruction de l'identité juive. Et une autre vie, celle que connaissent les " Juifs célestes " chers au cœur d'Aharon Appelfeld. Entre le proche et le lointain, l'identification et la distanciation, la vie quotidienne et la métaphysique, Aharon Appelfeld invente une littérature d'une force et d'une singularité inouïes.
La Stupeur
- 256pages
- 9 heures de lecture
To the Edge of Sorrow
- 468pages
- 17 heures de lecture
Battling numbing cold, ever-present hunger, and German soldiers determined to hunt them down, four dozen resistance fighters--escapees from a nearby ghetto--hide in a Ukrainian forest, determined to survive the war, sabotage the German war effort, and rescue as many Jews as they can from the trains taking them to concentration camps. Their leader is relentless in his efforts to turn his ragtag band of men and boys into a disciplined force that accomplishes its goals without losing its moral compass. And so when they're not raiding peasants' homes for food and supplies, or training with the weapons taken from the soldiers they have ambushed and killed, the partisans read books of faith and philosophy that they have rescued from abandoned Jewish homes, and they draw strength from the women, the elderly, and the remarkably resilient orphaned children they are protecting. When they hear about the advances being made by the Soviet Army, the partisans prepare for what they know will be a furious attack on their compound by the retreating Germans. In the heartbreaking aftermath, the survivors emerge from the forest to bury their dead, care for their wounded, and grimly confront a world that is surprised by their existence--and profoundly unwelcoming
Aharon Appelfeld was the child of middle-class Jewish parents living in Romania at the outbreak of World War II. He witnessed the murder of his mother, lost his father, endured the ghetto and a two-month forced march to a camp, before he escaped. Living off the land in the forests of Ukraine for two years before making the long journey south to Italy and eventually Israel and freedom, Appelfeld finally found a home in which he could make a life for himself. Acclaimed writer Appelfeld’s extraordinary and painful memoir of his childhood and youth is a compelling account of a boy coming of age in a hostile world.
It is the spring of 1939. In months Europe will be Hitler's, and Badenheim, a resort town vaguely in the orbit of Vienna, is preparing for its annual summer season. Soon the vacationers arrive, as they always have, a sample of Jewish middle-class life. The story unfolds as a matter-of-factly as a Chekhov play, its characters so deeply held by their defensive trivia that they manage to misconstrue every signal of their fate, until these signals take on the lineaments of disaster. "The writing flows seamlessly...a small masterpiece." Irving Howe, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW "As real as Kafka's unnamed Prague...imbued with a Watteau-like melancholy." Gabriel Annan, NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS "Magical...gliding from a kind of romantic realism into universal allegory." Peter Prescott, NEWSWEEK "The sorcery of Badenheim 1939 [lies in] the success with which the author has concocted a drab narrative involving rather ordinary characters and made their experienced profoundly symbolic yet never hollow." Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, NEW YORK TIMES
Poland, a Green Land
- 240pages
- 9 heures de lecture
"A Tel Aviv shopkeeper visits his parents' Polish birthplace in an attempt to come to terms with their complex legacy-and is completely unprepared for what he finds there. Yaakov Fine's practical wife and daughters are baffled by his decision to leave his flourishing dress shop for a ten-day trip to his family's ancestral village in Poland. Struggling to emerge from a midlife depression, Yaakov is drawn to Szydowce, intrigued by the stories he'd heard as a child from his parents and their friends, who would wax nostalgic about their pastoral, verdant hometown in the decades before 1939. The horrific years that followed were relegated to the nightmares that shattered sleep and were not discussed during waking hours. When he arrives in Krakow, Yaakov enjoys the charming sidewalk cafes and relaxed European atmosphere, so different from the hurly burly of Tel Aviv. And his landlady in Szydowce-beautiful, sensual Magda, with a tragic past of her own-enchants him with her recollections of his family. But when Yaakov attempts to purchase from the townspeople the desecrated tombstones that had been stolen from Szydowce's plowed-under Jewish cemetery, a very different Poland emerges, one that shatters Yaakov's idyllic view of the town and its people, and casts into sharp relief the tragic reality of Jewish life in Poland-past, present, and future. In this novel of revelation and reconciliation, Aharon Appelfeld once again mines lived experience to create fiction of powerful, universal resonance"-- Provided by publisher
Set in an Austrian city before the Holocaust, the narrative follows Karl, a young civil servant whose recent conversion to Christianity is intended to secure a high government position. However, as he faces a political crisis, his past resurfaces, challenging his beliefs and forcing him to confront his identity. The story explores themes of faith, ambition, and the complexities of personal choices against a backdrop of societal upheaval.

