The story opens in Israel, where Alex
Yagodah makes his home. He has been
notified by an American lawyer that he
stands to inherit a good deal of money
if he can say that he remains a Jew. Alex Yagodah's answer composes the substance of The 28th Day of Elul a powerful, bitter memoir of his youth in provincial Hungary at the time of the Nazi occupation.
Alex Yagodah belonged to a well to do
family in the town of Clig. Theirs was a
comfortable, carefully ordered existence, in which the suffering of Jews elsewhere remained distant and un troubling. The Yagodahs and the people around them could find in pretense a protection against hard choices. Young Alex's own life was
absorbed by his love affair with Lilo. But
one morning all the ]ews of Clig were
summoned to the public square, to be
told that they were to be deported at
once. Alex's father arranged a means of
escape for the family; but that arrangement (worked out in a business-like and even ceremonious fashion) carried with it the necessity of a huge betrayal. This extraordinary novel gains in meaning and intensity from the voice of the narrator. Weary, savagely intelligent, still moved by the memory of Lilo, Alex Yago a particular and terrible plight, an experience lived by one man, but larger than one man's experience.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.