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Lucette Lagnado

    September 19, 1956 – July 10, 2019

    Lucette Lagnado, an award-winning investigative reporter, delves into themes of social inequality and vulnerability in her writing. Her work, deeply informed by her personal experience as a refugee, explores complex issues surrounding healthcare, aging, and poverty. Lagnado masterfully uncovers the stories of the marginalized, offering readers profound insights into human resilience and fragility. Her prose is characterized by journalistic precision and an empathetic lens through which she portrays human experiences.

    Children of the Flames
    The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit
    • The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit

      A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World

      • 368 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Lucette Lagnado's father, Leon, is a successful Egyptian businessman and boulevardier who, dressed in his signature white sharkskin suit, makes deals and trades at Shepherd's Hotel and at the dark bar of the Nile Hilton. After the fall of King Farouk and the rise of the Nasser dictatorship, Leon loses everything and his family is forced to flee, abandoning a life once marked by beauty and luxury to plunge into hardship and poverty, as they take flight for any country that would have them. A vivid, heartbreaking, and powerful inversion of the American dream, Lucette Lagnado's unforgettable memoir is a sweeping story of family, faith, tradition, tragedy, and triumph set against the stunning backdrop of Cairo, Paris, and New York. Winner of the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and hailed by the New York Times Book Review as a "brilliant, crushing book" and the New Yorker as a memoir of ruin "told without melodrama by its youngest survivor," The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit recounts the exile of the author's Jewish Egyptian family from Cairo in 1963 and her father's heroic and tragic struggle to survive his "riches to rags" trajectory.

      The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit2007
      4.1
    • Children of the Flames

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      During World War II, Nazi doctor Josef Mengele subjected some 3,000 twins to medical experiments of unspeakable horror; only 160 survived. In this remarkable narrative, the life of Auschwitz's Angel of Death is told in counterpoint to the lives of the survivors, who until now have kept silent about their heinous death-camp ordeals.

      Children of the Flames1992
      4.0