Primo Levi: A Biography
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Average customer review:Product Description
On 11 April 1987, the Italian writer Primo Levi fell to his death in the house where he was born. More than forty years after his rescue from a Nazi concentration camp, it now seemed that Levi had committed suicide. Levi's account of Auschwitz, "If This Is A Man", is recognised as one of the essential books of mankind. No other work interrogates our recent moral history so incisively or conveys more profoundly the horror of the Nazi genocide. Written with great urgency to bear witness, the book put Levi among the foremost writers of our time. Ian Thomson spent over ten years in Italy and elsewhere researching and writing this rich and definitive biography. He traced the daughter of Levi's German superior at Auschwitz along with scores of other witnesses. New light is shed on Levi's recurring depressions and vital new information is unearthed regarding the writer's premature death. A witty, resilient man, Levi had suffered dark moods long before he deported. The suicide of his grandfather, niney-nine years earlier, is chronicled for the first time. This matchless biography unravels the strands of a life caught between the factory and the typewriter, family and friends.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #62485 in Books
- Published on: 2003-02-06
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 640 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
A rich life of the enormously gifted but deeply troubled Italian Jewish writer. Primo Levi's suicide on April 11, 1987, at the age of 67, angered some of his fellow Holocaust survivors, writes English journalist Thomson (Bonjour Blanc, not reviewed, etc.), who were "incensed at the apparent uselessness of the act." Others, however, well understood his decision to end his life, seeing in it one of the few acts of unbridled freedom in a carefully controlled and luckless life. Levi grew up in a comfortable Turin household where emotions were not easily expressed; "in later years," Thomson writes, "Levi told a journalist that he could not remember 'a single kiss or caress' from his mother." Whether or not that was true-and Thomson doubts that it is-Levi grew up to be a morose young man whose hopes of becoming a writer were dashed by the indifference of publishers (among the editors who rejected him were the writers Cesare Pavese and Natalia Ginzburg, the latter of whom later regretted her decision) and of a public that wanted to forget the historical realities that underlay Levi's extraordinary memoirs. Those were, of course, the mass deportation of Italian Jews, along with Jews from everywhere in Europe, to Auschwitz and other death camps, the setting for Levi's If This Is a Man and the allegorical Periodic Table, among others. These works are now part of the canon of Holocaust literature, even if Levi was uncomfortable as a spokesman and determined not to serve as "a symbolic rallying point for other people's suffering." In this sympathetic consideration of Levi's life, Thomson well fulfills his pledge, at the outset, to write a biography "not found in his books"-no easy task, given that much of Levi's output is an extended autobiography, but aided by Thomson's diligence in seeking out and interviewing those who knew the author. Readers may have trouble choosing between this and Carole Angier's The Double Bond (2002). Each has considerable merit, and admirers of Levi will want to know both. (Kirkus Reviews)
Clive James, Times Literary Supplement
‘ Thomson writes with snap…brio and a sense of relevance’
Richard Holmes, BBC Radio Four
‘A formidable work of literary biography…an absolutely brilliant account of wartime Italy…very, very powerful’




