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Elie Wiesel's novels - The Town Beyond the Wall, Twilight, The Gates of the Forest, The Accident, A Beggar in Jerusalem, and The Judges - win literary prizes in France, but often receive poor reviews in the United States. Lambert analyzes them clearly and cogently via two key themes: theodicy and friendship. She shows how the angry, embittered Holocaust survivor protagonists approach the God who seems to have broken His covenant at Auschwitz. This approach to God is made through friendships, some real and some mystical. Her analyses now render Wiesel's novels accessible to Americans who may already appreciate his essays and memoirs.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Elie Wiesel's novels - The Town Beyond the Wall, Twilight, The Gates of the Forest, The Accident, A Beggar in Jerusalem, and The Judges - win literary prizes in France, but often receive poor reviews in the United States. Lambert analyzes them clearly and cogently via two key themes: theodicy and friendship. She shows how the angry, embittered Holocaust survivor protagonists approach the God who seems to have broken His covenant at Auschwitz. This approach to God is made through friendships, some real and some mystical. Her analyses now render Wiesel's novels accessible to Americans who may already appreciate his essays and memoirs.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Carole J. Lambert is Professor of English and Director of Undergraduate Research at Azusa Pacific University. She received a Fulbright Scholarship to conduct research in Brussels, Belgium, plus four National Endowment for the Humanities grants. She is author of The Empty Cross: Medieval Hopes, Modern Futility in the Theater of Maurice Maeterlinck, Paul Claudel, August Strindberg, and Georg Kaiser, and co-editor with William D. Brewer of Essays on the Modern Identity (Peter Lang, 2000). She earned her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Berkeley, and has published widely in several journals.
Rezensionen
«No novelist has explored the Holocaust's reverberations more thoroughly than Elie Wiesel. No scholar has provided a more sensitive reading or a better informed interpretation of Wiesel's major novels than Carole Lambert. By emphasizing key themes about friendship, humankind's struggle against injustice, and God's relation to history, her study deepens not only our grasp of Wiesel's writing but also our insight about life itself.» (John K. Roth, Edward J. Sexton Professor of Philosophy and Director, The Center for the Study of the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights, Claremont McKenna College, California)