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The Life of Irene Nemirovsky: 1903-1942 »

Book cover image of The Life of Irene Nemirovsky: 1903-1942 by Olivier Philipponnat

Authors: Olivier Philipponnat, Patrick Lienhardt, Euan Cameron
ISBN-13: 9780307270214, ISBN-10: 0307270211
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Date Published: May 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Olivier Philipponnat

Olivier Philipponnat and Patrick Lienhardt are coauthors of an acclaimed biography of Roger Stéphane, who was the cofounder of L’Observateur and a pioneer of educational television in France. In addition to The Life of Irène Némirovsky, they have collaborated on a number of projects pertaining to Némirovsky’s fiction, including prefaces to new editions of her novels. Philipponnat will curate an exhibit at the Mémorial de la Shoah based on Némirovsky’s life and works, which will open in Paris in October 2010.

Prior to their work together, Lienhardt worked as a press attaché at the haute couture house Yves Saint Laurent, before focusing on publishing and writing. He created and managed a Web site dedicated to book news, Parutions.com, until 2002. Philipponant was formerly a music critic at Compact and Cinefonia; he now writes as a literary critic for Parutions.com and Le Magazine des livres. He is also the author of The Superfluous Dictionary of Classical Music.

Book Synopsis

The first major biography of the author of Suite Française

The posthumous publication of Suite Française won Irène Némirovsky international acclaim and brought millions of readers to her work. But the story of her own life was no less dramatic and moving than her most powerful fiction.

With her family, she escaped Russia in 1919 and settled in Paris, where she met and married fellow Jewish émigré Michel Epstein. In 1929 she published her highly acclaimed and controversial novel David Golder, the first of many successful books that established her stellar reputation. But when France fell to the Nazis, her renown did her little good: without French citizenship, she was forced to seek refuge in a small Burgundy village with her husband and their two young daughters. And in July 1942 Némirovsky was arrested and deported to Auschwitz, where she died the following month.

Drawing on Némirovsky’s diaries, previously untapped archival material, and interviews, her biographers give us at once an intimate picture of her life and turbulent times and an illuminating examination of the ways in which she used the details of her remarkable life to create “some of the greatest, most humane, and incisive fiction [World War II] has produced” (The New York Times Book Review).

The Barnes & Noble Review

When Irene Nemirovsky, a Russian Jew who wrote in French, perished in Auschwitz in 1942, she was already a well-known and controversial novelist in her adopted homeland of France. But her notoriety waned in the coming decades, before being launched to spectacular heights with the posthumous publication of Suite Française, in France in 2004 and in the U.S. in 2006. The discovery of that manuscript, which contained two masterful novellas about the war then raging around the author, has made Nemirovsky's work and thorny life story an industry unto itself, with new editions and critical appraisals appearing each year.

In their recent Nemirovsky biography, the Frenchmen Olivier Philipponnat and Patrick Lienhardt center the tale of the author's life on her alleged anti-Semitism. The biographers continually plead, with an unaccountably personal zeal, that the secular, upper class Nemirovsky was not anti-Semitic. Their arguments are not persuasive.

Philipponnat and Lienhardt admit that Nemirovsky once published an anti-Semitic satire in a newspaper, but they muster a raft of excuses: the author was young (only 18); most French newspapers were anti-Semitic at the time; the author acted as a "mimic." But later in her career, Nemirovsky often endowed her Jewish characters with features straight out of anti-Semitic cartoons, such as "hooked noses" and an overriding lust for money. She may not have been a committed Jew-hater -- she claimed to be "proud" of her heritage -- but the evidence offered here confirms that she waded in the shallow end of that fetid pool.

Philipponnat and Lienhardt's treatment is further undermined by a failure to assume a proper authorial distance from its subject. In the sections chronicling Nemirovsky's youth in Ukraine and Russia, with some travels in France, the authors refer to the future novelist by the affectionate diminutive "Irotchka." To fill in gaps of Nemirovsky's childhood, they use passages from her fiction to describe her impressions of scenery and people in her life, including her parents. This sloppy tactic reaches its nadir early on, in the biography's prologue, when Philipponnat and Lienhardt write what Nemirovsky "thinks" as she's dying in Auschwitz, cribbing lines from her novel The Dogs and the Wolves. It's a shocking liberty for the authors to take and one that's completely unnecessary. Nemirovsky's life story stands on its own as complicated, richly detailed (she coped with the violence of the 1917 Russian Revolution by reading Wilde and collecting shell casings when the shooting stopped), and tragic. Sadly, this biography, while showing signs of thorough research and movingly written in its description of the war years, fails to comprehend that a great writer can still be an unpleasant person.

--Jacob Silverman

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