Biografías
In 1951, Meyer Levin's wife gave him a copy of The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank, which had just been published in France. Levin was already a successful writer in his mid-forties, searching for a way to bear witness to his experiences as a war correspondent in Europe. In Anne Frank's diary, he found the voice he had been waiting for. The Obsession, widely regarded as one of Meyer Levin's finest works, is a candid account of his struggle to bring his version of Anne Frank's diary to Broadway. Levin's adaptation, begun with the support of Anne's father, Otto, was eventually deemed 'unstageworthy,' and he was supplanted by non-Jewish writers. To Levin, it was a clear case of sanitizing Anne's story in favor of mass appeal. He battled for his version in courtrooms and out, but the fallout nearly destroyed both his family and his career. In recounting the mania that gripped him for twenty years, Levin spares neither himself nor others. Like all his best work, this extraordinary memoir encompasses larger themes—the nature of Jewishness, the price of assimilation, the writer's obligation to himself and to his subject, and the search for identity and purpose. "The Obsession is an autobiographical account by one of America's best contemporary novelists of his twenty-year agonizing enslavement to an idea. ... It is a dramatic book, beautifully written, with suspense, sensational revelations, the striking changes of pace and focus, and relentless seeking after the meaning of the obsession." - Sage Journal Publications
© 2014 JABberwocky Literary Agency, Inc. (Ebook): 9781625670649
Fecha de lanzamiento
Ebook: 12 de agosto de 2014
Más de 1 millón de títulos
Modo sin conexión
Kids Mode
Cancela en cualquier momento
Para los que quieren escuchar y leer sin límites.
$7.99 /mes
Escucha y lee los títulos que quieras
Modo sin conexión + Modo Infantil
Cancela en cualquier momento