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THE GUARDIAN, PARIS
Sunday, Oct 24, 2004, page 6
Sixty-two years after its author died in the gas chambers of Auschwitz,
a remarkable and previously unpublished wartime work by a Russian
Jewish immigrant in France has taken the world of publishing by storm.
Suite Francaise, the first two parts of what Irene Nemirovsky originally
intended to be a five-volume epic, has been hailed by ecstatic French
critics as "a masterpiece" and "probably the definitive
novel of our nation in the second world war."
Rights to the work, published three weeks ago, have already been
sold in 18 countries often for sums higher than any previously paid
for a French novel, and a vigorous campaign is underway for Nemirovsky
to be posthumously awarded France's most prestigious literary prize,
the Goncourt.
"One of the great 20th century authors ... A gigantic literary
and historical gift," said the daily La Croix. "A work
of exceptional force ... remarkable because written not after, but
during, the war," said L'Express.
"A superb work ... A capital discovery," said the Le Point
weekly. "A chef-d'oeuvre ... ripped from oblivion," said
Le Monde.
Overwhelming as the praise has been, the story of Irene Nemirovsky
is as gripping as the 430-page work itself.
Born in February 1903 in Kiev, the daughter of a wealthy Jewish
banker, Irene fled Russia in 1918 and arrived with her family in
France the following year. A privileged life of balls, banquets and
beaux between Paris, Biarritz and the Cote d'Azur gave way by the
mid-1920s to that of a hugely popular and critically-acclaimed writer;
David Golder (1929) and Le Bal (1930) established Nemirovsky as one
of the most talented and celebrated authors of her day, "the
Francoise Sagan of the time."
In 1926 Irene married Michel Epstein, an immigrant Russian businessmen
and the couple had two daughters; Denise, born in 1929, and Elisabeth,
in 1937.
Harboring no illusions about the fate that might await them, Irene
and Michel dispatched the girls to the small Burgundy village of
Issy-l'Eveque with their nurse on Sept. 1 1939 as war loomed.
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