I am deeply, deeply affected by this sad, beautiful, indignant, wrenching, important book . . . It is an artistic privilege and (I think) almost a moral duty that you all read this

- SARAH PERRY, author of THE ESSEX SERPENT,

Foenkinos writes arrestingly about Charlotte, masterfully imagining her interior life . . . So much space on the page visually transforms each paragraph into a stanza, while lending the words a solemn weight and power . . . [A] beautiful, wretched story

* Guardian *

An astonishing novel. Every line has something profound to say about love and loss, hope and fear, time and memory, and the enduring power of art

- ANDREW MICHAEL HURLEY, author of THE LONEY,

Se alle

From its striking first sentence there is no turning away . . . A far superior tribute to any commemorative plaque

- SARA BAUME, * Irish Times *

Each sentence begins on a new line, giving it the deceptive look of a long poem. The success of this approach, loyally managed by Sam Taylor in his translation, is the make <i>Charlotte </i>read as a series of tricker-tape bulletins, delivered in breathless fits and starts

* London Review of Books *

Unforgettable, poetic

* Sunday Independent *

Quietly but deeply moving, incredibly powerful in its simplicity

- CLAIRE NORTH, author of THE FIRST FIFTEEN LIVES OF HARRY AUGUST,

Heartbreaking. A story about loss and resilience, set in Nazi Germany, <i>Charlotte </i>is an inspiring novel made all the more powerful by being based on a true story about the life of a relatively unknown artist. The ending comes as no surprise, but I still found myself devastated by it

- Sarah Crossan, * Guardian *

A life-changer

- POLLY CLARK, author of LARCHFIELD,

A tour de force. Every important detail and much more of this supreme artist's life . . . is recorded lovingly, passionately, obsessively and lyrically . . . The verse-like narrative . . . produces a befittingly vibrant creativity

* Jewish Chronicle *

Charlotte Salomon is born into a family stricken by suicide and a country at war. But there is something exceptional about her - she has a gift, a talent for painting. And she has a great love, for a brilliant, eccentric musician. But just as she is coming into her own as an artist, death is coming to control her country. The Nazis have come to power and, as a Jew in Berlin, Charlotte's life is narrowing, and she knows every second is precious.

Inspiring, unflinching, terrible and hopeful, Charlotte is the heartbreaking true story of a life filled with curiosity, animated by genius and cut short by hatred.

Les mer
The international bestseller: the tragic and triumphant story of one of the twentieth century's most extraordinary but little-known artists. 'Sad, beautiful, indignant, wrenching, important' Sarah Perry, author of THE ESSEX SERPENT
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781782117964
Publisert
2018-01-04
Utgiver
Vendor
Canongate Books
Vekt
154 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
14 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
224

Forfatter
Oversetter

Om bidragsyterne

David Foenkinos is an award-winning French novelist and screenwriter. Charlotte, inspired by the life of Charlotte Salomon, won the Prix Renaudot and the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens; it has sold more than half a million copies in France and been translated into nineteen languages.

Sam Taylor previously translated HHhH, by Laurent Binet, and is the author of the novels The Island at the End of the World, The Amnesiac and The Republic of Trees. He lives in France and the United States.

Charlotte Salomon was born in Berlin, 1917. Unknown in her lifetime, she was one of Germany's great modern artists. Her greatest achievement was Life? or Theatre? A Song-play - an autobiographical series of 769 works, which she painted over two years in the South of France while in hiding from the Nazis. It has gone on to inspire films, plays and an opera. Salomon died in Auschwitz in 1943, gassed along with her unborn child shortly after her arrival.