Parallel Lines by Peter Lantos - ISBN: 9781905147571
Paperback
Child’s astonishing Holocaust journey, survival, loss, and rediscovering hope.

Parallel Lines

A Journey from Childhood to Belsen

$23.55

  • Paperback

    300 pages

  • Release Date

    1 May 2014

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Summary

“I have read few autobiographies more extraordinary … Astonishing” OBSERVER

“A classic. I preferred it to Primo Levi’s If This is a Man” EDWARD WILSON

“A child’s clear-eyed journey to hell” ANNE SEBBA

This is a story of a young boy’s journey from a sleepy provincial town in Hungary during the Second World War to the concentration camp in Bergen-Belsen. After a winter in Bergen-Belsen where his father died, he …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781905147571
ISBN-10:1905147570
Author:Peter Lantos, Lisa Appignanesi
Publisher:Quercus Publishing
Imprint:Arcadia Books
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:300
Release Date:1 May 2014
Weight:209g
Dimensions:196mm x 128mm x 20mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

I have read few autobiographies more extraordinary … Astonishing * Observer *
Something of a genius, with the readability of a classic – Alan Sillitoe
Anyone who thinks they have read all these is to be said about he Holocaust should read one more book, Parallel Lines … A child’s clear-eyed journey to hell paralleled by an adult’s scientific quest to understand the journey – Anne Sebba
A remarkable addition to the literature of the Holocaust * Sunday Times *
Lantos’ spare writing hits with a shocking punch and moves steadily and calmly into the tragic * The Age (Melbourne) *
Lantos follows clues, detecting and retracing the steps of his past … I defy anyone to read this account without retrospective anger on behalf of those who suffered – Michelene Wandor * Jewish Chronicle *
A movingly narrated memoir – Clare Colvin * Independent *
This wonderful memoir … introduces a writer with rare gifts * The Tablet *
A classic. I preferred it to Primo Levi’s If This is a Man – Edward Wilson * author of A RIVER IN MAY and THE MIDNIGHT SWIMMER *
Movingly told memories of a Hungarian childhood shattered by Belsen * Independent *

About The Author

Peter Lantos

By the age of 30, PETER LANTOS had survived Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, was beaten by the Communist police in Hungary, qualified in medicine, defected to England, sentenced to imprisonment for this “crime” in his absence and had established a career in academic medicine in London. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and in his previous life he was an internationally known clinical neuroscientist who has retired from a Chair at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London. After retirement, it was his childhood experiences that gave him the impetus to write Parallel Lines. He is also the author of a novel, Closed Horizon, and a trilogy of plays, collectively entitled Stolen Lives. He lives in London.

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