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Deviation
Deviation | Luce d'Eramo
2 posts | 2 read | 4 to read
A devoted fascist changes her mind and her life after witnessing the horrors of the HolocaustFirst published in Italy in 1979, Luce D'Eramo's Deviation is a seminal work in Holocaust literature. It is a book that not only confronts evil head-on but expands that confrontation into a complex and intricately structured work of fiction, which has claims to standing among the greatest Italian novels of the twentieth century.Lucia is a young Italian girl from a bourgeois fascist family. In the early 1940s, when she first hears about the atrocities being perpetrated in the Nazi concentration camps, she is doubtful and confused, unable to reconcile such stories with the ideology in which she's been raised. Wanting to disprove these "slanders" on Hitler's Reich, she decides to see for herself, running away from home and heading for Germany, where she intends to volunteer as camp labor. The journey is a harrowing, surreal descent into hell, which finds Lucia confronting the stark and brutal realities of life under Nazi rule, a life in which continual violence and fear are simply the norm. Soon it becomes clear that she must get away, but how can she possibly go back to her old life knowing what she now knows? Besides, getting out may not be as simple as getting in.Finally available in English translation, Deviation is at once a personal testament, a work of the imagination, an investigation into the limits of memory, a warning to future generations, and a visceral scream at the horrors of the world.
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blurb
AlaMich
Deviation | Luce d'Eramo
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I‘m not sure if the crack of dawn before work is the right time to begin this but I‘m going to try.

A semi-autobiographical story of a young Italian girl who volunteers at a labor camp in Germany to find out whether she has been fed lies about the Nazi regime.

#catsoflitsy

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review
kyraleseberg
Deviation | Luce d'Eramo
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Panpan

While I respect the author and this novel as an important piece of Holocaust literature, the autofiction moving from first to third person (while understandably necessary for the writer since she wrote it over such a long span of time) made it impossible for me to connect with the story unfortunately.
Thanks to FSG and NetGalley for providing an ARC for review.