The narrator is a professor of literature who, during a school visit to the Buchenwald camp, sees a photograph of a detainee looks remarkably like his father. It will continually find traces This man, to recompose its history.
Through this exciting novel the author tries to show how history is still working individuals, despite the passing of time because the narrator is a third generation. Great writers are invoked concentration camp, Levi, Wiesel, Semprun ... This should not and can not forget is a little lesson in this text. What remains astounding to me is how relatively mundane stories become real tragedies because the historical context is involved. Men are then the prey of this collective madness and destiny is the stuff a nightmare divine. According to historical accounts, the testimonies of survivors, is the novel that received the shock waves of this conflict absurd and terrifying. Less impressive than the magnificent book of Daniel Mendelsohn, The Lost , Fabrice Humbert's narrative is engrossing and raises questions about identity, who are we? what we going through? What moves us?
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