The Algeria Hotel: France, Memory and the Second World War
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #227907 in Books
- Published on: 2001-08-23
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 305 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
The Algeria Hotel in Vichy was the site of the Gestapo Headquarters in World War 2: an emblem of the French cohabitation with the worst excess of Nazism. But it's hard in modern France to find anyone who acknowledges being anything but a member of the Resistance - a national amnesia is in place, only now beginning to be questioned. When the veil is lifted, deep passions are stirred. Adam Nossiter grew up in a France desperate to believe in its innocence; in THE ALGERIA HOTEL he visits three towns where the past hangs heavy and finds a layer of unease and disturbance. In Bordeaux, he follows the trial of Maurice Papon, functionary and war criminal, seeking 'those who might have reason for not remembering'; there are many, self-serving, dismissive, forgetful. In Vichy, capital of occupied France, every building and corner is full of association in spite of all attempts to block it. And in Tulle, still haunted by the events of June 8, 1944, when German soldiers hanged 99 men and sent another 101 to concentration camps in retaliation for a Resistance action', the past hangs over the town like a pall that cannot be lifted.
Customer Reviews
Point of view from one of the actors
I was born at the Algeria Hotel at the beginning of the war. I had several opportunities to speak to the author and even once met him in Vichy with my father. His book is more about the present than the past and gives an insight on how the French face this past today. As far as I is concerned, it is a fair review with a good understanding of the mixed feelings we have about those times.



