The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million
The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million (ISBN 978-0-06-054297-9) is a non-fiction memoir by Daniel Mendelsohn, published in September 2006, which has received critical acclaim as a new perspective on Holocaust remembrance. It was awarded the National Book Critics Circle Award, the National Jewish Book Award, and the Prix Médicis in France, and it was shortlisted for the Duff Cooper History Prize in the UK. An international bestseller, The Lost has been translated into several languages, including French, German, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, German, Romanian, Turkish, Norwegian, and Hebrew.
The Lost tells of Mendelsohn's world-wide travels in search of details about the lives and fates of a maternal great-uncle, Samuel (Shmiel) Jäger, his wife, Ester, and their four daughters who lived in Bolechow and were killed during the Nazi occupation. According to the author, "My book is about trying to find out exactly, specifically, what happened to those people."[1]
In writing The Lost, Mendelsohn notes a debt to Marcel Proust, telling Salon.com, "Clearly, the book is in some large sense about the possibility of recovering the past, so it's automatically a Proustian book."
Sources and Reviews
- New York Times Book Review front-page review by Ron Rosenbaum
- Elie Wiesel Review in The Washington Post
- New York Review of Books Review by Charles Simic (October 5, 2006)
- The Nation review
- Charlotte News-Observer review
- Newsday review
- On Point radio/ WBUR Interview (September 28, 2006)
- NPR story/ Fresh Air interview (October 18, 2006)
- Pittsburgh Tribune review
- Salon.com Interview (December 14, 2006)
- Times of London profile
- LIRE: Entretien avec Daniel Mendelsohn
External links
- The Lost video - Conversation with Daniel Mendelsohn, at publisher Harpercollins
- CNN interview transcript - July 13, 2002 interview about the original New York Times magazine article
- DanielMendelsohn.com
References
- ↑ O'Hehir, Andrew (December 14, 2006). "Finding "The Lost"". Salon.com. Retrieved 2006-12-29.