Danse Macabre: Memoir of a Polish Girl at the Time of the Russian Revolution (1914/1924)

Danse Macabre: Memoir of a Polish Girl at the Time of the Russian Revolution (1914/1924)

Paperback (20 Nov 2018)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Memoir of a Polish Girl at the Time of the Russian Revolution (1914/1924). Expanded second edition with additional photographs. Irene Rochas was born Aniela Tarnowicz in Warsaw in 1906, the youngest child in a large upper middle-class Polish family. With the outbreak of WW I in 1914, Irene and her family were stranded in Moscow, and with the further outbreak of the Bolshevik Revolution, they were able to return to their homeland only after a delay of four years. Irene's rediscovered narrative - written when she was fifty years old and set in the form of a novel - is a remembrance of those eventful years of her childhood in Moscow and Warsaw. In this sense, it is truly a "memoir". Yes, "danse macabre" is the dance of death, the last waltz to which we are all invited. But Irene's "Danse Macabre" -- with its inquisitive and empathetic tone... and its often searing imagery -- is less a rumination on the inevitability of death and more a testament to the vibrancy of life itself. [340 pp., Endnote, 30 plates]

Book information

ISBN: 9780578149165
Publisher: Lulu Press
Imprint: A.M. Benis
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 340
Weight: 499g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 19mm