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Mass Market Paperback Fifth Son Book

ISBN: 0446300381

ISBN13: 9780446300384

Fifth Son

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

Reuven Tamiroff, a Holocaust survivor, has never been able to speak about his past to his son, a young man who yearns to understand his father's silence. As campuses burn amidst the unrest of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Seeking the Light that Binds Mankind

Elie Wiesel, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and survivor of the Holocaust, has written another monumental book on the nature of good and evil. Using a story-telling technique and the Socratic method, he examines existential angst, torment and pain. He asks essential questions. How does one recognize and accept the Holocaust? Is vengeance ever possible? How does one forget? In this book, Wiesel looks at the macrocosm of the human situation and applies it to the microcosm of the individual. He asks the most important questions using parables. "One mustn't be afraid of silence, Theresa. It harms only those who violate it." (p. 183) "A word of advice for our dear Paritus comes to mind: To journey through life, man must choose between nausea and a smile". (p. 200) Dr. Wiesel chooses to look at the goodness that people share while also honoring the evil that exists in the history of mankind. He has a great mind, one that has experienced great sorrow and disappointment yet still seeks the light.

Easily the most powerful book I ever read

This book was amazing. It was written so well and told a story seldom written about. I have read many book about the Holocaust, but none dealt with the realities of being the child of a survivor. I cried for 200 of the 230 pages. This book has so much to teach, and was a very quick read. It is a must-read for anyone who knows Holocaust survivors or their children.

The Ties That Bind

As a Jew who survived the horrors of the Holocaust and life in a concentration camp, Elie Wiesel continuosly weaves these circumstances into his writings. In his works, he struggles to answer nearly impossible questions: why was it the fate of the Jews to die and why did they seem to accept that fate without a fight? "The Fifth Son" is a philosophical testament that seeks the answers to those questions, but also imaginatively examines the bond between father and son. As usual with Wiesel's novels, the reader is transported from the present to the past numerous times. We meet Rueven Tamiroff, a librarian in New York, a Jew who survived the Holocaust, and a father who cannot communicate with his unnamed son. His son desperately searches for the keys to his father's behavior, searching out stories of his past through every possible means. When he finally uncovers the truth about his father's past that is destroying his present reality, the son becomes obsessed with setting the record straight. The son's travels take him back to Germany and into the darkest recesses of encroaching madness. Wiesel's characters are vividly written, intelligent and fragile creatures. Wiesel takes his readers on a philosophical tour of Nazi torture and the revenge that assauged those Jews who survived WWII, as well as the guilt they felt for surviving when so many others did not. He speaks eloquently of the displacement of Jews who moved to America, as well as the anger of the younger German generation who are blamed for the sins of the older generation. The questions he raises are hard to answer; mainly because answers are yet to be found that would satisfy Wiesel.

A Beautiful Read

Wiesel writes with the voice of a poet in this complex novel. It is told from the point of view of a Jewish young man who is trying desperately to understand his father, a Holocaust survivor. The young man, who is never named, wants to know everything he can about his father's experiences, and he slowly begins to gain information through his father's friends and through the letters he discovers, written by his father to his son Ariel. The book begins in a sequence that is confusing in the manner of a poem; it eventually becomes clearer as the themes of the book are developed. The young man is going to visit Germany to meet up with his father's past and somehow come to terms with it. He struggles with hate and forgiveness, and ultimately meets up with his father's past, and his own obsession, in a confrontation that tests his courage and helps him approach some sort of peace.
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