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Elena Lappin

    December 16, 1954
    Elena Lappin
    Fremde Bräute
    Natashas Nase
    The diary of Petr Ginz
    What Language Do I Dream In?: A Memoir
    Daylight in nightclub Inferno : Czech fiction from the post-Kundera generation
    Jewish voices, German words
    • 2016

      What Language Do I Dream In?: A Memoir

      • 310 pages
      • 11 hours of reading
      3.7(11)Add rating

      Taking its title from a question often asked of polyglots, What Language Do I Dream In? is Elena Lappin's stunning memoir about how language runs throughout memory and family history to form identity. Lappin’s life could be described as “five languages in search of an author”, and as a multiple émigré, her decision to write in English was the result of many wanderings. Russian, Czech, German, Hebrew, and finally, English: each language is a link to a different piece of Lappin’s rich family mosaic and the struggle to find a voice in a language not one’s own. From Europe to North America—and back again, via some of the twentieth century’s most significant political upheavals—Lappin reconstructs the stories and secrets of her parents and grandparents with the tenderness of a novelist and the eye of a documentary filmmaker. The story of Lappin’s identity is unexpectedly complicated by the discovery, in middle age, that her biological father was an American living in Russia. This revelation makes her question the very bedrock of her knowledge of her birth, and adds a surprising twist: suddenly, English may be more than the accidental “home in exile”—it is a language she may have been close to from the very beginning. “English is not my mother tongue,” writes Elena Lappin, “it is something more valuable: a language I was lucky enough to be able to choose.” What Language Do I Dream In? is a wonderful, honest story about love, family, memory, and how they intertwine to form who we are.

      What Language Do I Dream In?: A Memoir
    • 2007

      Originally written in his own special code-language, Petr's diaries describe daily life for the Ginz family and document the introduction of anti-Jewish laws from a young child's point of view - pithy and unsentimental.

      The diary of Petr Ginz
    • 1997
    • 1994