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Martina Rinaldi

    The Sapphire Widow
    The family Carnovsky
    I MiniMammut - 240: La famiglia Karnowski. Ediz. integrale
    • The Sapphire Widow

      • 400 pages
      • 14 hours of reading

      Nineteen-year-old Gwendolyn Hooper is newly married to a rich and charming widower, eager to join him on his tea plantation, determined to be the perfect wife and mother. But life in Ceylon is not what Gwen expected. The plantation workers are resentful, the neighbors are treacherous. And there are clues to the past - a dusty trunk of dresses, an overgrown gravestone in the grounds - that her husband refuses to discuss. Just as Gwen finds her feet, disaster strikes. She faces a terrible choice, hiding the truth from almost everyone, but a secret this big can't stay buried forever ...

      The Sapphire Widow2020
      3.7
    • Tre generazioni di ebrei, completamente assimilati alla società tedesca, si susseguono sotto la crescente e minacciosa ombra del nazismo. L’intesa saga familiare si apre con David, il patriarca, che lascia la Polonia per trasferirsi nella civilissima Berlino e si considera più tedesco dei tedeschi stessi; il figlio Georg, che ha imparato sin da piccolo a comportarsi «da ebreo in casa e da uomo di mondo fuori», diventa un famoso e richiestissimo medico, salvo poi perdere tutto, ricchezze, professione e ogni possibile speranza, a causa delle orribili leggi razziali. La storia di Jegor, il suo giovane figlio, dilaniato dall’odio che prova per la sua stessa identità di ebreo, conclude la parabola dei Karnowski. Affresco vivido e commovente della società ebraica in Germania tra l'inizio del secolo scorso e gli anni a cavallo delle due guerre mondiali, La famiglia Karnowski è riconosciuto come un grande classico della letteratura del Novecento.

      I MiniMammut - 240: La famiglia Karnowski. Ediz. integrale2018
      4.6
    • The dread shadow of Nazism falls upon the Carnovsky family, three generations of Jews who believe themselves totally assimilated into German society. David, who has prospered in "enlightened, civilized" Berlin and considers himself "more German than the Germans", cannot rationalize the momentous events engulfing him. His son Georg, a famous doctor, taught by his father to be "Jewish at home, a German in the street", is stripped of his practice, his possessions, and ultimately his illusions. And his young son Jegor is pulled between his love for the fatherland and the Jewishness he scorns. A tragedy of torn loyalties, this powerful and panoramic novel has become one of the classics of our time.

      The family Carnovsky2015
      4.4