The Rest Is Memory

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$24.99  $23.24
Publisher
Liveright Publishing Corporation
Publish Date
Pages
128
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.0 X 0.6 inches | 0.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781324095729

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Lily Tuck, the winner of the National Book Award for The News from Paraguay, is the author of seven novels, three short story collections, and a biography of Elsa Morante. The recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship, she lives in New York.
Reviews
The haunting story of one real-life Polish teenager amplifies the infinite horror of Auschwitz....With myriad references to the historical realities of the Holocaust, the work beautifully interweaves Tuck's imagined story of Czeslawa's constrained life before the German occupation and the hideous conditions she faced during her short, brutal months at Auschwitz. Extensively annotated and researched, Tuck's brief novel returns, time and time again, to the subject of memories, a theme alluded to in an epigraph consisting of a fragment of a Louise Glück poem. The author's skillful blending of facts and fiction reanimates the memory of one of the countless lost children of the Holocaust. A painful, essential, unflinching memento.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Tuck (Sisters) draws on the true story of a Polish Catholic girl who died in Auschwitz in her unflinching latest...With graphic imagery and lyrical prose, Tuck vividly evokes Czeslawa's innocence and resilience, as she tries to hold out hope by imagining Anton in Auschwitz with her. It's an unforgettable portrait of buoyant youth in the grimmest of places.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Tuck's profound historical novel imagines Czeslawa's life leading up to this photograph and during her time at Auschwitz... Tuck intersperses Czeslawa's haunting narrative with varied historical accounts and figures, holding a resolute eye to the atrocities of the time and the lives cut short.-- "Booklist"
Though brief and austere, this novel is epic in its power to restore: first a girl, then her family, and at last an epoch in human history. Addictively compulsive, Lily Tuck's story powers forward like the growing tragedy it chronicles, yet it never sacrifices the human moments, serenely and tenderly observed. Like a white stork rising from a dark forest, The Rest Is Memory fills the silence with a great beating of wings.--Adam Johnson, author of the National Book Award-winning Fortune Smiles
A wonderful novel, as formally innovative, controlled, and moving as any I have read in a long while. Lily Tuck is a stunning prose writer, a true original.--Phillip Lopate, author of A Year and a Day
Lily Tuck writes with sensitivity of a young girl's struggle to understand . . . the inevitable anguish that awaits her.--Susanna Moore, author of The Lost Wife
A name, a photograph, a tattooed number. Not much more is known about Czeslawa Kwoka, a Polish Catholic girl who died in Auschwitz on March 12, 1943. But out of those few dry facts Lily Tuck has made an extraordinary and disturbingly brilliant novel, one that can stand with the best of W.G. Sebald or Patrick Modiano, and The Zone of Interest too, as a testament to what we must always remember.--Michael Gorra, author of The Saddest Words: William Faulkner's Civil War
Clocking in at just 144 pages, this slim novel will devastate you all in one sitting . . . Haunting and austere, The Rest Is Memory captures a child's struggle to understand the unimaginable. It's nothing short of a literary resurrection, tenderly and unflinchingly observed.--Esquire, "The Best Books of Fall 2024"
A short but searing new novel by Lily Tuck. . . . [T]he National Book Award winner brings to vivid life just one of the thousands killed in the Nazi death camp. . . . As Tuck shows us in this short, brutal book, Czeslawa Kwoka was a human being rather than a statistic, robbed of a life that can only be imagined.--Clea Simon "Boston Globe"
An extraordinary achievement. . . . Like much of her output, including her mesmerizing The Double Life of Liliane, her book is a hybrid work that deftly mixes fact and fiction and blurs genres and boundaries. . . . Tuck has sensitively and skillfully created a memorial to a life cut short while shining necessary light on the darkest chapter of the 20th century.--Malcolm Forbes "Minneapolis Star-Tribune"
The book is exactly as harrowing as longer Auschwitz novels inevitably are, but its beautiful, spare, unflinching language and its insistence on the primacy and persistence of human dignity -- and, yes, its brevity -- make a brutal story more bearable.--Margaret Renkl "New York Times"
The overwhelming force of the novel comes from the sense it conveys of the relentless march of historical events.... None of this makes for easy reading, but it's part of Tuck's great skill that the story never loses momentum under its own emotional weight. Every page contains something interesting as well as moving.... It's a deeply impressive achievement from a wonderful writer and loses none of its power from the fact that the ground has been well covered.--Benjamin Markovits "New York Times"
This slender, potent novel imagines the life of Czeslawa Kwoka, a Catholic teen-ager from the Zamosc region of Poland, who was killed in Auschwitz in 1943. Tuck deftly animates Czeslawa and her family, situating their lives within the larger context of Hitler's effort to eradicate Poland and its culture. The novel sets up a powerful contrast between its intimately rendered characters and its steady accretion of facts delineating the objective horror of life in Auschwitz.-- "New Yorker"
Tuck weaves her story around the photo, part of a triptych of images of Czeslawa, and anchors it within a carapace of historical fact. Her tale, structured as a series of short takes, is a shimmeringly delicate invention. Cool and spare, the third-person narrative zigzags through time, accumulating authenticity and power. It is hard to stop reading.... The Rest Is Memory evokes the work of W.G. Sebald, a German writer who similarly merged fact, fiction and photography in his treatment of Holocaust themes. Tuck's descriptions of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his family share the icy blankness of Jonathan Glazer's 2023 film, The Zone of Interest, adapted from Martin Amis' 2014 novel.--Julia M. Klein "Los Angeles Times"
A spare, short novel that shines a light on the 6 million Poles who died during World War II. Critics say The Rest Is Memory is somehow shattering and hopeful at the same time.--Michael Giltz "Parade"