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<title>Elie Wiesel - Free Library Land Online - LGBT</title>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/</link>
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<description>Elie Wiesel - Free Library Land Online - LGBT</description>
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<title>Legends of Our Time</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39364-legends_of_our_time.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39364-legends_of_our_time.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/legends_of_our_time.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/legends_of_our_time_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Legends of Our Time" alt ="Legends of Our Time"/></a><br//>A collection of tales immortalizing the heroic deeds and visions of people Wiesel knew during and after World War II.  
<em>From the Trade Paperback edition.</em>]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel / Memoir / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>Open Heart</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39358-open_heart.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39358-open_heart.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/open_heart.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/open_heart_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Open Heart" alt ="Open Heart"/></a><br//>**Translated by Marion Wiesel  
A profoundly and unexpectedly intimate, deeply affecting summing up of his life so far, from one of the most cherished moral voices of our time.**  
Eighty-two years old, facing emergency heart surgery and his own mortality, Elie Wiesel reflects back on his life. Emotions, images, faces and questions flash through his mind. His family before and during the unspeakable Event. The gifts of marriage and children and grandchildren that followed. In his writing, in his teaching, in his public life, has he done enough for memory and the survivors? His ongoing questioning of God—where has it led? Is there hope for mankind? The world’s tireless ambassador of tolerance and justice has given us this luminous account of hope and despair, an exploration of the love, regrets and abiding faith of a remarkable man.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel  / Memoir  / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Oct 2011 15:10:56 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>Night</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39363-night.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39363-night.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/night.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/night_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Night" alt ="Night"/></a><br//><em>Night</em> is Elie Wiesel's masterpiece, a candid, horrific, and deeply poignant autobiographical account of his survival as a teenager in the Nazi death camps. This new translation by Marion Wiesel, Elie's wife and frequent translator, presents this seminal memoir in the language and spirit truest to the author's original intent. And in a substantive new preface, Elie reflects on the enduring importance of Night and his lifelong, passionate dedication to ensuring that the world never forgets man's capacity for inhumanity to man.  
<em>Night</em> offers much more than a litany of the daily terrors, everyday perversions, and rampant sadism at Auschwitz and Buchenwald; it also el]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel   / Memoir   / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
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<title>And the Sea Is Never Full: Memoirs 1969</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39360-and_the_sea_is_never_full_memoirs_1969.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39360-and_the_sea_is_never_full_memoirs_1969.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/and_the_sea_is_never_full_memoirs_1969.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/and_the_sea_is_never_full_memoirs_1969_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="And the Sea Is Never Full: Memoirs 1969" alt ="And the Sea Is Never Full: Memoirs 1969"/></a><br//>As this concluding volume of his moving and revealing memoirs begins, Elie Wiesel is forty years old, a writer of international repute. Determined to speak out more actively for both Holocaust survivors and the disenfranchised everywhere, he sets himself a challenge: "I will become militant. I will teach, share, bear witness. I will reveal and try to mitigate the victims' solitude." He makes words his weapon, and in these pages we relive with him his unstinting battles. We see him meet with world leaders and travel to regions ruled by war, dictatorship, racism, and exclusion in order to engage the most pressing issues of the day. We see him in the Soviet Union defending persecuted Jews and dissidents; in South Africa battling apartheid and supporting Mandela's ascension; in Cambodia and in Bosnia, calling on the world to face the atrocities; in refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia as an emissary for President Clinton. He chastises Ronald Reagan for his visit to the German military cemetery at Bitburg. He supports Lech Walesa but challenges some of his views. He confronts Francois Mitterrand over the misrepresentation of his activities in Vichy France. He does battle with Holocaust deniers. He joins tens of thousands of young Austrians demonstrating against renascent fascism in their country. He receives the Nobel Peace Prize. Through it all, Wiesel remains deeply involved with his beloved Israel, its leaders and its people, and laments its internal conflicts. He recounts the behind-the-scenes events that led to the establishment of the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. He shares the feelings evoked by his return to Auschwitz, by his recollections of Yitzhak Rabin, and by his memories of his own vanished family. This is the magnificent finale of a historic memoir.  
<em>From the Trade Paperback edition.</em>]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel    / Memoir    / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sun, 11 Oct 1998 15:10:56 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>The Testament</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39353-the_testament.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39353-the_testament.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_testament.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_testament_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Testament" alt ="The Testament"/></a><br//>On August 12, 1952, Russia's greatest Jewish writers were secretly executed by Stalin. In this remarkable blend of history and imagination, Paltiel Kossover meets the same fate but, unlike his real-life counterparts, he is permitted to leave a written testament. From a Jewish boyhood in pre-revolutionary Russia, Paltiel traveled down a road that embraced Communism, only to return to Russia and discover a Communist Party that had become his mortal enemy. Two decades later, Paltiel's son, Grisha, reads this precious record of his father's life and finds that it illuminates the shadowed planes of his own. <br />
Passionate and fierce, this story of a father's legacy to his son revisits some of the most dramatic events of our century, and confirms yet again Elie Wiesel's stature as "a writer of the highest moral imagination" ("San Francisco Chronicle").]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel     / Memoir     / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sat, 11 Oct 1980 15:10:55 +0300</pubDate>
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<title>The Sonderberg Case</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39349-the_sonderberg_case.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39349-the_sonderberg_case.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_sonderberg_case.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_sonderberg_case_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Sonderberg Case" alt ="The Sonderberg Case"/></a><br//>From the Nobel laureate and author of the masterly <em>Night,</em> a deeply felt, beautifully written novel of morality, guilt, and innocence.  
Despite personal success, Yedidyah—a theater critic in New York City, husband to a stage actress, father to two sons—finds himself increasingly drawn to the past. As he reflects on his life and the decisions he’s made, he longingly reminisces about the relationships he once had with the men in his family (his father, his uncle, his grandfather) and the questions that remain unanswered. It’s a feeling that is further complicated when Yedidyah is assigned to cover the murder trial of a German expatriate named Werner Sonderberg. Sonderberg returned alone from a walk in the Adirondacks with an elderly uncle, whose lifeless body was soon retrieved from the woods. His plea is enigmatic: “Guilty . . . and not guilty.”   
These words strike a chord in Yedidyah, plunging him into feelings that bring him harrowingly close to madness. As Sonderberg’s trial moves along a path of dizzying yet revelatory twists and turns, Yedidyah begins to understand his own family’s hidden past and finally liberates himself from the shadow it has cast over his life.  
With his signature elegance and thoughtfulness, Elie Wiesel has given us an enthralling psychological mystery, both vividly dramatic and profoundly emotional.  
<em>From the Hardcover edition.</em>]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel      / Memoir      / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sat, 11 Oct 2008 15:10:54 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>Dawn: A Novel</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39354-dawn_a_novel.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39354-dawn_a_novel.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/dawn_a_novel.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/dawn_a_novel_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Dawn: A Novel" alt ="Dawn: A Novel"/></a><br//>**"The author…has built knowledge into artistic fiction."—<strong><em> </em>*The New York Times Book Review</strong> *  
Elisha is a young Jewish man, a Holocaust survivor, and an Israeli freedom fighter in British-controlled Palestine; John Dawson is the captured English officer he will murder at dawn in retribution for the British execution of a fellow freedom fighter. The night-long wait for morning and death provides <em>Dawn</em>, Elie Wiesel's ever more timely novel, with its harrowingly taut, hour-by-hour narrative. Caught between the manifold horrors of the past and the troubling dilemmas of the present, Elisha wrestles with guilt, ghosts, and ultimately God as he waits for the appointed hour and his act of assassination. <em>Dawn</em> is an eloquent meditation on the compromises, justifications, and sacrifices that human beings make when they murder other human beings.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel       / Memoir       / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>The Oath</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39351-the_oath.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39351-the_oath.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_oath.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_oath_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Oath" alt ="The Oath"/></a><br//>When a Christian boy disappears in a fictional Eastern European town in the 1920s, the local Jews are quickly accused of ritual murder. There is tension in the air and a pogrom threatens to erupt. Suddenly, an extraordinary man—Moshe the dreamer, a madman and mystic—steps forward and confesses to a crime he did not commit, in a vain attempt to save his people from certain death. The community gathers to hear his last words—a plea for silence—and everyone present takes an oath: whoever survives the impending tragedy must never speak of the town’s last days and nights of terror.  
For fifty years the sole survivor keeps his oath—until he meets a man whose life depends on hearing the story, and one man’s loyalty to the dead confronts head-on another’s reason to go on living.  
One of Wiesel’s strongest early novels, this timeless parable about the Jews and their enemies, about hate, family, friendship, and silence, is as powerful, haunting, and significant as it was when first published in 1973.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel        / Memoir        / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>Day</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39355-day.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39355-day.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/day.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/day_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Day" alt ="Day"/></a><br//><strong>"Not since Albert Camus has there been such an eloquent spokesman for man." *--The New York Times Book Review</strong>*  
The publication of <em>Day </em>restores Elie Wiesel's original title to the novel initially published in English as <em>The Accident</em> and clearly establishes it as the powerful conclusion to the author's classic trilogy of Holocaust literature, which includes his memoir <em>Night</em> and novel <em>Dawn</em>. "In <em>Night </em>it is the ‘I' who speaks," writes Wiesel. "In the other two, it is the ‘I' who listens and questions."  
In its opening paragraphs, a successful journalist and Holocaust survivor steps off a New York City curb and into the path of an oncoming taxi. Consequently, most of Wiesel's masterful portrayal of one man's exploration of the historical tragedy that befell him, his family, and his people transpires in the thoughts, daydreams, and memories of the novel's narrator. Torn between choosing life or death, <em>Day</em> again and again returns to the guiding questions that inform Wiesel's trilogy: the meaning and worth of surviving the annihilation of a race, the effects of the Holocaust upon the modern character of the Jewish people, and the loss of one's religious faith in the face of mass murder and human extermination.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel         / Memoir         / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>Hostage</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39362-hostage.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39362-hostage.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/hostage.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/hostage_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Hostage" alt ="Hostage"/></a><br//>From Elie Wiesel, Nobel laureate and author of <em>Night,</em> a charged, deeply moving novel about the legacy of the Holocaust in today’s troubled world and the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.<br />
            It’s 1975, and Shaltiel Feigenberg—professional storyteller, writer and beloved husband—has been taken hostage: abducted from his home in Brooklyn, blindfolded and tied to a chair in a dark basement. His captors, an Arab and an Italian, don’t explain why the innocent Shaltiel has been chosen, just that his life will be bartered for the freedom of three Palestinian prisoners. As his days of waiting commence, Shaltiel resorts to what he does best, telling stories—to himself and to the men who hold his fate in their hands. <br />
            With beauty and sensitivity, Wiesel builds the world of Shaltiel’s memories, haunted by the Holocaust and a Europe in the midst of radical change. A Communist brother, a childhood spent hiding from the Nazis in a cellar, the kindness of liberating Russian soldiers, the unrest of the 1960s—these are the stories that unfold in Shaltiel’s captivity, as the outside world breathlessly follows his disappearance and the police move toward a final confrontation with his captors.<br />
            Impassioned, provocative and insistently humane, <em>Hostage </em>is both a masterly thriller and a profoundly wise meditation on the power of memory to connect us to the past and our shared need for resolution.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel          / Memoir          / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 11 Oct 2010 15:10:56 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>The Tale of a Niggun</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/570877-the_tale_of_a_niggun.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/570877-the_tale_of_a_niggun.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_tale_of_a_niggun.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/the_tale_of_a_niggun_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Tale of a Niggun" alt ="The Tale of a Niggun"/></a><br//><b><b>Based on an actual event that occurred during World War II, this heartbreaking narrative poem about history, immortality, and the power of song is accompanied by magnificent full-color paintings by award-winning artist Mark Podwal.</b></b><br>It is the evening before the holiday of Purim, and the Nazis have given the ghetto's leaders twenty-four hours to turn over ten Jews to be hung to "avenge" the deaths of the ten sons of Haman, the villain of the Purim story, which celebrates the triumph of the Jews of Persia over potential genocide some 2,400 years ago. If the leaders refuse, the entire ghetto will be liquidated. Terrified, they go to the ghetto's rabbi for advice; he tells them to return the next morning. Over the course of the night the rabbi calls up the spirits of rabbis from centuries past, but no one can give him a satisfactory answer; they've never encountered anything like this. The eighteenth century mystic and founder of Hasidism, the Ba'al Shem Tov, tries to...]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel           / Memoir           / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jan 2020 09:55:24 +0200</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>From the Kingdom of Memory: Reminiscences</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39350-from_the_kingdom_of_memory_reminiscences.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39350-from_the_kingdom_of_memory_reminiscences.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/from_the_kingdom_of_memory_reminiscences.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/from_the_kingdom_of_memory_reminiscences_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="From the Kingdom of Memory: Reminiscences" alt ="From the Kingdom of Memory: Reminiscences"/></a><br//>"One of the great writers of our generation" (The New Republic) weaves together memories of his life before the Holocaust and his great struggle to find meaning afterwards. Included are Wiesel's landmark speeches, among them his powerful testimony at the trial of Klaus Barbie and his 1986 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech.  
<em>From the Trade Paperback edition.</em>]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel            / Memoir            / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Thu, 11 Oct 1990 15:10:54 +0300</pubDate>
</item><item>
<title>A Mad Desire to Dance</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39357-a_mad_desire_to_dance.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39357-a_mad_desire_to_dance.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/a_mad_desire_to_dance.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/a_mad_desire_to_dance_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="A Mad Desire to Dance" alt ="A Mad Desire to Dance"/></a><br//>From Elie Wiesel, a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize and one of our fiercest moral voices, a provocative and deeply thoughtful new novel about a life shaped by the worst horrors of the twentieth century and one man's attempt to reclaim happiness. <br />
Doriel, a European expatriate living in New York, suffers from a profound sense of desperation and loss. His mother, a member of the Resistance, survived World War II only to die in an accident, together with his father, soon after. Doriel was a child during the war, and his knowledge of the Holocaust is largely limited to what he finds in movies, newsreels, and books--but it is enough. Doriel's parents and their secrets haunt him, leaving him filled with longing but unable to experience the most basic joys in life. He plunges into an intense study of Judaism, but instead of finding solace, he comes to believe that he is possessed by a dybbuk. <br />
Surrounded by ghosts, spurred on by demons, Doriel finally turns to Dr. Therese Goldschmidt, a psychoanalyst who finds herself particularly intrigued by her patient. The two enter into an uneasy relationship based on exchange: of dreams, histories, and secrets. Despite Doriel's initial resistance, Dr. Goldschmidt helps to bring him to a crossroads--and to a shocking denouement. <br />
In Doriel's journey into the darkest regions of the soul, Elie Wiesel has written one of his most profoundly moving works of fiction, grounded always by his unparalleled moral compass. "From the Hardcover edition."]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel             / Memoir             / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 11 Oct 2006 15:10:56 +0300</pubDate>
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<title>One Generation After</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39359-one_generation_after.html</guid>
<link>https://lgbt.library.land/elie-wiesel/39359-one_generation_after.html</link>
<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/one_generation_after.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/elie-wiesel/one_generation_after_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="One Generation After" alt ="One Generation After"/></a><br//>Twenty years after he and his family were deported from Sighet to Auschwitz, Elie Wiesel returned to his town in search of the watch—a bar mitzvah gift—he had buried in his backyard before they left.  
<em>From the Trade Paperback edition.</em>]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Elie Wiesel              / Memoir              / Fiction]]></category>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 1977 21:47:48 +0300</pubDate>
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