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The Search for Roots: A Personal Anthology (1981)

por Primo Levi

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1547177,278 (4.23)2
The Search for Roots is an anthology of writing that Primo Levi considered to be essential reading. Beginning with The Book of Job, that drama of the just oppressed by injustice, these thirty pieces with introduction by Levi, reflect his profound knowledge of science and deep passion for literature, and his survival of Auschwitz, making it a collection that is both universal and poignantly autobiographical.… (más)
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» Ver también 2 menciones

«Quanto delle nostre radici viene dai libri che abbiamo letti? Tutto, molto, poco e niente: a seconda dell'ambiente in cui siamo nati, della temperatura del nostro sangue, del labirinto che la sorte ci ha assegnato».
Primo Levi
  MemorialeSardoShoah | Nov 10, 2022 |
This book disappointed me because I have so much liked his other writings more than what he chooses to read. I appreciated the introduction to a variety of writing, and re-reading some that I read, but I found many to be tedious and boring. ( )
  suesbooks | Feb 9, 2021 |
An ecclectic collection full of despair and inspiration. Themes of pride as a sin, pride as a virtue, stoicism, patience and humour pepper this book. ( )
  ChrisWarren | Mar 12, 2010 |
In 1981, noted author and Holocaust survivor Levi edited this anthology of 30 short excerpts from works that were especially important to him. They are basically arranged in the order he read them himself and point to four main themes, delineated in the preface: salvation through laughter, our unjust suffering, our stature as human beings, and salvation through knowledge. These four aspects of Levi's reading possessed him both as a writer and as a man. The book covers such major writers as Homer, Rabelais, Jonathan Swift, T.S. Eliot, and Thomas Mann. Science writing (e.g., Charles Darwin, Arthur C. Clarke, Ludwig Gattermann) and Jewish life in 20th-century Europe (Levi's great subject, represented by writers like Isaac Babel and Sholem Aleichem) are also represented. Especially noteworthy are the excerpts from lesser-known Italian writers (e.g., Carlo Porta, Giuseppe Parini). Not only are the selections themselves illuminating but Levi's preface and notes are invaluable additions to the writings of this author of reason, morality, and honesty. The introduction by Forbes, the editor of Poetry Review, and afterword by Italo Calvino further explain the anthology.

Levi, who committed suicide in 1987, said that he felt more naked and exposed to the public in making the choices for this "personal anthology" of his favorite reading than in writing his own books, including his memoirs of surviving Auschwitz. Lifelong readers will recognize Levi's passion to share what he's read, the favorite books he keeps on the same shelf, all profusely underlined, and his discovery that his deeper and more lasting loves are the hardest to explain.
  antimuzak | Mar 25, 2008 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/834919.html

A series of extracts ranging from one page to six of thirty favourite pieces of reading. I only knew four of them (The Book of Job, Gulliver's Travels, Moby-Dick and Murder in the Cathedral) and some of the others I think lose rather in translation (the Italian vernacular poetry of Giuseppe Belli) but there were a few pieces here from authors I would like to follow up for myself some time (Thomas Mann, Rabelais). ( )
  nwhyte | Apr 5, 2007 |
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The Search for Roots is an anthology of writing that Primo Levi considered to be essential reading. Beginning with The Book of Job, that drama of the just oppressed by injustice, these thirty pieces with introduction by Levi, reflect his profound knowledge of science and deep passion for literature, and his survival of Auschwitz, making it a collection that is both universal and poignantly autobiographical.

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