Afbeelding auteur

Rose Zwi (1928–2018)

Auteur van Last Walk in Naryshkin Park

8 Werken 56 Leden 2 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Rose Zwi was born in Oaxaca, Mexico on May 8, 1928. She grew up in South Africa. She received an honours degree in English literature from the University of Witwatersrand in 1967. She worked as an editor at Raven Press. Her debut novel, Another Year in Africa, received South Africa's Olive toon meer Schreiner literary prize in 1982. She migrated to Australia in 1988. Her novel Safe Houses won the 1994 Australian Human Rights award for fiction and her nonfiction book Last Walk in Naryshkin Park won the Asia Pacific Publisher's Association Award. She died in October 2018 at the age of 90. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder

Werken van Rose Zwi

Last Walk in Naryshkin Park (1997) 16 exemplaren
Another Year in Africa (1980) 13 exemplaren
The Umbrella Tree (1990) 13 exemplaren
To Speak the Truth, Laughing (2002) 6 exemplaren
Safe Houses (1993) 3 exemplaren
Exiles : a novel (1984) 1 exemplaar
The inverted pyramid: A novel (1981) 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1928-05-08
Overlijdensdatum
2018-10-22
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
Australia
Geboorteplaats
Oaxaca, Mexico
Plaats van overlijden
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Woonplaatsen
Oaxaca, Mexico (birthplace)
Johannesburg, South Africa
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Opleiding
University of the Witwatersrand
Beroepen
novelist
short story writer
literary editor
Korte biografie
Rose Zwi was born in Mexico to Jewish refugees from Lithuania. When she was a young girl, her family moved to South Africa. She graduated from the University of Witwatersrand with a BA in English literature in 1967. She lived briefly in Israel, but returned to South Africa, where she worked as a literary editor at Ravan Press and was active in Black Sash, a civil rights organization. In 1988, she immigrated to Australia. She is an award-winning novelist and short story writer. For her book Last Walk in Naryshkin Park (1997), Rosa Zwi traced her roots back to the small town in Lithuania that her parents fled to escape rising anti-Semitism in the years leading up to WWII and the Holocaust.

Leden

Besprekingen

I applaud Rose Zwi for her frankness in documenting her family history, for Once Were Slaves is just that, a family history that involves exile, separation from family members and involves the will to survive the atrocities forced upon the family members.

The well-to-do Perlov family members, Jews of Lithuania, were literally forced out of their home and loaded onto trucks taking them to a train station, and from there they ended up in the frigid cold of Komi in Russia.

Their family journey through the labor camp experience and survival is written frankly, although with conflicting memories and stories. Rose Zwi doesn't mince words or try to color coat the experiences. When there is conflict in truth, she states it, when there is lack of memory, she states it.

Once out of the labor camps, various family members traveled throughout the world, like wandering Jews, some had found a home in Israel, others were emotionally displaced and constantly trekked the world. Most members of the family were separated for extremely long periods of time (50 years of two members) others were killed or had died, others tried to assimilate into their environment.

Once Were Slaves by Rose Zwi is a poignant book, a memoir of historical relevance and one that kept me reading straight through until I finished it.

I am glad to have read Once Were Slaves, and am grateful to the author for the review copy she sent me (unrelated to Library Thing).
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
LorriMilli | Mar 29, 2011 |
A book of short stories - didn't really grab me I'm afraid.
 
Gemarkeerd
sally906 | Jun 13, 2009 |

Prijzen

Statistieken

Werken
8
Leden
56
Populariteit
#291,557
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
19

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