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But You Did Not Come Back
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
10 posts | 13 read | 14 to read
A breathtakingly beautiful memoir by a survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau and an astonishing addition to the library of literature on the Holocaust Marceline Loridan-Ivens was just fifteen when she was arrested along with her father in the Vichy-ruled part of France. Her mother and siblings managed to escape arrest. On their arrival at the camps, the two were separated--her father sent to Auschwitz, she to the neighboring camp of Birkenau. The three kilometres that separated them were an insurmountable distance, and yet her father managed to send her a short note, addressed to "My darling little girl". In But You Did Not Come Back, Marceline writes a letter responding to the father she would never know as an adult, to the man whose death enveloped her whole life. As a documentary film-maker in the 1970s and '80s, working in China and Vietnam, Marceline ultimately found purpose in her life, but the loss of her father never diminished in its intensity. And now, as anti-Semitism resurfaces in many parts of the world, Loridan-Ivens's testimony is a haunting and challenging reminder of one of the worst crimes humanity has ever seen. It is a deeply affecting personal story of a woman whose life was shattered and gradually rebuilt, and an irrefutable example of how memory survives and shapes everything. From the Hardcover edition.
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Chars
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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Pickpick

There are certain books that leave you different, not just in how you understand the past but in how you look at the future. Marceline Loridam-Ivens‘ memoir about her time at Auschwitz-Birkenau and her experience wading through the aftermath left me different. In a mere 100 pages, she pulls you in so deep that you leave feeling simultaneous full and absolutely hollow.

mirnas Great book! 2y
4 likes1 comment
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mirnas
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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Pickpick

In 1944 Marceline Rozenberg was 15 years old. She and her father were arrested in south France, sent to Drancy and then deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Marceline survived. Her father didn't. 70 years after, she writes her testimony, in a form of a letter adressed to her father. Brutal and moving Holocaust memoir.

Curiouser_and_curiouser Even the title brings tears to my eyes.... 4y
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TheEllieMo
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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So the plan sort of worked. I‘m supposed to be trying to reduce the volume of books I own, so I‘ve been taking read books down to the charity book case at my local Tesco. Took two in today - and came back with one. So I have still reduced the number of books I possess....

Bookwormjillk 😁👏 4y
ljuliel At that rate, you‘re making progress 😊 4y
Smrloomis I admire your restraint 👏🏽 4y
37 likes3 comments
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Adventures-of-a-French-Reader
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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This is a letter written by the author to her father, who died in Auschwitz. In this letter, she tells him how she survived in Birkenau, how was her return from the camps, and how was her life after all that. She writes with a disarming sincerity about the horrible reality in the camps, about the difficulty of coming back from the camps, and also about the difficulty of living afterwards.
I highly recommend it!

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MeganTurner
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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A very emotional read💔 really really recommend this beautiful memoir. It really puts into perspective how absolutely abhorrent concentration camps really were and the effects they had on survivors.

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ephemeralwaltz
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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Pickpick

This is much more than a Holocaust memoir, this is a harrowing love letter to the author's father who never made it back. This very short read describes life before and reflects on life after, and how it might have been different had the father been there too. It's also a cry for recognition and political resolution and the realization that the Camps never leave those who have been there...
(tagged is the English edition)

⭐⭐⭐⭐

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ephemeralwaltz
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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Afternoon reading alternating between these current reads 👌

Kalalalatja Looks lovely 👌 6y
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Mirazzles
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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Do not let the slim size of this memoir deceive you because it is one of the most powerful, emotional, and thought provoking memoirs I have ever read. I highly recommend it.

Nute I will be looking for this the next time that I‘m in a bookstore because of your words. Thanks for recommending it.🙂 5y
Mirazzles I highly recommend it. It was deeply moving and I still think about it months later. 5y
13 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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peacegypsy
But You Did Not Come Back | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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This brief Holocaust memoir reminds us that post-WWII, outliving the camps and loss remains a challenge. It‘s important to remember that surviving the Holocaust doesn‘t mean you fully lived, as M L-I attests.

LizzieLou Omg, I'm crocheting a blanket out of the same yarn!! 6y
peacegypsy @LizzieLou Awesome! I ❤️❤️❤️ the colors in that yarn, and have bought too much of it. Everyone I know will match by next winter! 😂 6y
43 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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HijackMe
Und du bist nicht zurckgekommen | Marceline Loridan-Ivens, Judith Perrignon
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The bleakness & horrors in Holocaust-memoirs can be daunting but anybody with even a tiny bit of interest in this era should try this one. It condenses not only Marcelines memories of her time in Birkenau into 100 pages but also its consequences: Trauma, grief, survivors guilt, the death of her family, the birth of a new will to live & build a better world & worries about the present. It's a lot, but made a surprisingly elegant and light read.

saresmoore It sounds fascinating. Great review! 7y
HijackMe It's also available in English. I have no idea if #overthis only covers the US and its problems but since politicians everywhere seem to think it's suddenly okay to talk about camps as a solution to everything, it seems more relevant than ever. (edited) 7y
saresmoore I agree. I also think that one country's issues cause global effects, now more than ever. This is a great addition to the #overthis subject. Thanks for tagging the English version! 7y
20 likes3 comments