She planned her work in five volumes, Némirovsky only completed two, but the circumstances of the interrupted work — the author's arrest, deportation, and death from typhus in Auschwitz in July 1942, helps the reader to have a more understanding of how the novel plays out.
An only child, Irène Némirovsky was born into a world of precarious privilege.
Her father, Léon, along with her future father-in-law, Efime Epstein, belonged to an elite of Russian Jews, centered in Kiev. Wealth and imperial favor had enabled them to escape the nightmare of pogroms, only to find that their protected status made them enemies of the Revolution.
In 1917, when Irène was 14, she and her family fled for their lives — first, to the remote countryside of Finland, then to Sweden. In 1919, they arrived in Paris quite poor. Léon returned to banking and, helped by the boom years of the 1920s, he rose straight to the top once again.
http://www.nysun.com/arts/laffaire-nmirovsky/57373/
She started writing when she was 18 years old.
In 1926, Irène Némirovsky married Michel Epstein, a banker, and had two daughters: Denise, born in 1929; and Élisabeth, in 1937.
Irène Némirovsky was jewish, but converted to Catholicism in 1939 and wrote in Candide and Gringoire, two anti-Semitic magazines—probably to hide the family's Jewish origins and protect their children from growing anti-Semitic persecution.
Upon the Nazis' approach to Paris, they fled with their two daughters to the village of Issy-l'Evêque.
where Némirovsky was required to wear the yellow star.
On July 13, 1942, Irène Némirovsky (then 39) was arrested as a "stateless person of Jewish descent" by French police under the regulations of the German occupation. As she was being taken away, she told her daughters, "I am going on a journey now." She was brought to a convoy assembly camp and on July 17 together with 928 other Jewish deportees transported to Auschwitz.
Upon her arrival there two days later, her forearm was marked with an identification number. According to official papers at the time, she died a month later of typhus. Other records revealed that Irène was actually gassed there by the Nazis.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ir%C3%A8ne_N%C3%A9mirovsky
Monday, May 11, 2009
Monday, January 12, 2009
Fiction Book prt. 10
I just finished A Northern Light and absolutely loved it!! I would highly recommend this book to anyone who's interested in a fictional mystery with a little bit of history involved as well. At the end of the novel, Mattie realizes that she can't be stuck in a small town for the rest of her life when she has the opportunity to full fill her dream of becoming a writer. She ends up going to New York to pursue this dream. As for Grace Brown, Mattie reads the rest of the letters that Grace asked her to burn. Mattie never ends up burning the letters for the sake of figuring out the mystery of her death. Grace Brown was killed by her boyfriend Chester Gillette. She went to the Glenmore hotel with Chester in order to get married to him because she was pregnant with his child. But, because Grace was just a poor factory worker, Chester did not want to marry her because of her "status." Because she was pregnant though, Chester thought the only way to get rid of Grace was to murder her. He took her out to the lake in a boat and pushed her in. He knew Grace couldn't swim because of one of the letters he received from her informing him of this in fact crucial information.
As for her fiance Royal, she found out that he only wanted to marry her for her fathers land. She gave the ring back on her way to New York. In the end, Mattie was in fact really saved by Grace Brown in a way because she figured out that she didn't want to be stuck in a life she didn't want like Grace was. All in all, great book that really gives a message of hope and believing in yourself to create a better future. I will remember Grace Brown's story as one that made not only history, but also the plot to a great story.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Fiction Book Prt. 9
At this point in the story, Mattie finds out from a family friend that her family is gravely ill. She rushes home from her job at the Glenmore hotel to discover her house a complete disaster, the barn a total mess with the animals everywhere, and her sisters lying on the floor with no strength at all. She helps her sisters get to their beds and discovers her father in bed shivering. She tries everything she can to help her family members feel better like bathing them in cold water to bring down their fevers. With the help of some family friends, she cures her family with medications and saves the barn by taking care of all of the animals. She then realizes how her family got the mysterious illness. It was because her father helped a sick woman home one day and caught the virus then. Lather on, Royal, who is Mattie's fiance, finally gets enough money to give her an engagement ring. Even though it's just a gold band she loves it as much as she loves him. Royal goes onto tell Mattie that he finally has enough money to start a life with her and that with the help of her savings, they'll be able to find a home for themselves. Even though Mattie is so excited to finally have the ring, I can't help but wondering if this marriage to Royal is going to cause Mattie to not follow her dream of going to college and becoming a writer. I hope somehow she'll still get to go to New York and full fill this dream with or without a husband.
Monday, January 5, 2009
Fiction Book prt. 8
Another interesting question I have come across in the back of the book is...
"Why would Grace want the letters to be destroyed?
Shouldn't Mattie tell someone about the letters as soon as Grace's body is fished from the lake?
Why doesn't she?"
I think Grace would want the letters to be destroyed because they show a past that she want's to be erased from her memory. The person she's in love with maybe hurt her in some way, this might cause Grace to feel angry and hurt and want the letters to be destroyed.
I thought at first Mattie should have told someone about Grace's letters after her body was discovered. It seemed like the right thing to do at the time. But now that I keep reading and putting two and two together, maybe Mattie's doing the right thing by not showing the letters to anyone because Mattie seems to be a logical girl who could solve the mystery as to what happened with Grace and why she was killed.
"Why would Grace want the letters to be destroyed?
Shouldn't Mattie tell someone about the letters as soon as Grace's body is fished from the lake?
Why doesn't she?"
I think Grace would want the letters to be destroyed because they show a past that she want's to be erased from her memory. The person she's in love with maybe hurt her in some way, this might cause Grace to feel angry and hurt and want the letters to be destroyed.
I thought at first Mattie should have told someone about Grace's letters after her body was discovered. It seemed like the right thing to do at the time. But now that I keep reading and putting two and two together, maybe Mattie's doing the right thing by not showing the letters to anyone because Mattie seems to be a logical girl who could solve the mystery as to what happened with Grace and why she was killed.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Ficton book prt. 7
For this post I'm going to write a letter to Jennifer Donnelly the author.
Dear Ms. Donnelly,
Dear Ms. Donnelly,
I have found your book to be quite entertaining and true to life. It deals with a lot of coming of age problems that we as teenagers must face during the course of our lives. It shows us how to become stronger people and listen to what's inside of us and not just what people around us think. I appreciate the fact that Mattie is such a strong character in a sense that she has an independent spirit and does not care what people think of her. She's very strong willed and also cares for her family to the point of fighting for them. I think one of my favorite parts in the book is when Miss Wilcox, Mattie's school teacher, reveals herself to be Emily Baxter, a famous poet of that time period who wrote poetry that was so controversial that she has to go under a different name. This is as I see it a pivital point in the novel because we finally see why Miss Wilcox wants to help Mattie achieve her dream of going to college.
I think it's very interesting how the murder of Grace Brown was incorporated into the novel. It makes stories that much more interesting when a real historical event is placed in the novel as a back story to something fictional that is happening. In the back of the book it shows all of the research that was taken into putting in Grace Browns story.
A Northern Light is a great book in that it has real history and fiction put into a book that all ages would enjoy.
I think it's very interesting how the murder of Grace Brown was incorporated into the novel. It makes stories that much more interesting when a real historical event is placed in the novel as a back story to something fictional that is happening. In the back of the book it shows all of the research that was taken into putting in Grace Browns story.
A Northern Light is a great book in that it has real history and fiction put into a book that all ages would enjoy.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Fiction Book prt. 6
At this point in the story, Mattie is still contemplating weather or not to read these mysterious letters that Grace Brown, one of the murder victims, asked her to burn. Mattie feels this pressure because she thinks that Grace wouldn't be pleased with her reading them, but she also feels that these letters might help figure out who killed Grace.
Meanwhile, Mattie has taken her exams that will determine weather or not she will get accepted into college. She has worked very hard and has studied a great amount for these exams and is hoping she will get into college to full fill her dreams of writing.
There is alot of back and forth between past and present in this novel and we're still in the stage where we're finding out about characters and development of them to see how they play out in the novel.
Meanwhile, Mattie has taken her exams that will determine weather or not she will get accepted into college. She has worked very hard and has studied a great amount for these exams and is hoping she will get into college to full fill her dreams of writing.
There is alot of back and forth between past and present in this novel and we're still in the stage where we're finding out about characters and development of them to see how they play out in the novel.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Fiction Book prt. 5
In the back of the book I have once again found an interesting question to ponder.
"Mattie says that at the Glenmore she learned "when to tell the truth and when not to." Under what circumstances might it be better not to tell the truth?"
This question is interesting to me especially because it reminds me in a way of good and bad ethics which is what we're doing in class right now. To answer the question I think it would be better to tell the truth when it's a minor thing. Like for instance you broke your mothers vase. She asks who did this and you should just simply reply and tell her the truth. It will save you probably a minor punishment and your mother will be happier that you didn't lie. A circumstance where it's probably better to lie than tell the truth would probably be, kind of like the example we used in class last week. Let's say Jon has 2 friends that have a website that makes fun of teachers and has inappropriate messages on it. The principle finds out and brings Jon in for questioning. Jon can either tell the truth and loose his friends or lie and pretend he doesn't know anything about it, and still have his friends trust. This can go either way but, I think Jon would probably lie to keep his friends trust and knowing others in society if this happened to them they would probably do the same thing.
"Mattie says that at the Glenmore she learned "when to tell the truth and when not to." Under what circumstances might it be better not to tell the truth?"
This question is interesting to me especially because it reminds me in a way of good and bad ethics which is what we're doing in class right now. To answer the question I think it would be better to tell the truth when it's a minor thing. Like for instance you broke your mothers vase. She asks who did this and you should just simply reply and tell her the truth. It will save you probably a minor punishment and your mother will be happier that you didn't lie. A circumstance where it's probably better to lie than tell the truth would probably be, kind of like the example we used in class last week. Let's say Jon has 2 friends that have a website that makes fun of teachers and has inappropriate messages on it. The principle finds out and brings Jon in for questioning. Jon can either tell the truth and loose his friends or lie and pretend he doesn't know anything about it, and still have his friends trust. This can go either way but, I think Jon would probably lie to keep his friends trust and knowing others in society if this happened to them they would probably do the same thing.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)