A lyrical memoir ofliving under, and escaping from, anti-Semitism and the tyranny of communism.
“There are scenes in this book that thereader will never forget.”—Mircea Eliade
With a new Afterwordby the author and a new Introduction by bestselling historian Wilfred M. McClay
In Notes from theOther Side of Night, Juliana Geran Pilon provides a beautiful memoir of areturn to her native Romania in 1975, which she left with her family when shewas just fourteen. Poetically weaving together hard-won adult insights with herchildhood perceptions, Pilon tells the haunting stories of her parents,grandparents, neighbors, and friends. She recounts the chilling realities of anti-Semitism,political imprisonment, and judicial execution under Romania’s ruthlesscommunist authorities. And she remembers those few who managed to retain theirhumanity despite the horrors that surrounded them.
Told with detachedmelancholy, the result is a book full of political and spiritual wisdom. At atime when the totalitarian crimes of the last century are being minimized, ifnot entirely ignored, Pilon’s meditation on evil, hope, and love is profoundly moving.
Language
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
ISBN-13
978-1-967613-25-0 (9781967613250)
Schweitzer Classification
Juliana Geran Pilon is a Senior Fellow at the Alexander Hamilton
Institute for the Study of Western Civilization, where she has directed AHI’s
Washington Program on National Security since 2016. Her books include:
An
Idea Betrayed: Jews, Liberalism, and the American Left;
The Utopian
Conceit and the War on Freedom;
The Art of Peace: Engaging a
Complex World;
Soulmates: Resurrecting Eve; the anthology
Cultural
Intelligence for Winning the Peace;
Why America is Such a Hard
Sell: Beyond Pride and Prejudice; the anthology
Every Vote Counts:
The Role of Elections in Building Democracy, which she co-edited with
Richard Soudriette; and
The Bloody Flag: Post-Communist Nationalism in
Eastern Europe—Spotlight on Romania. The author of over two hundred fifty
articles and reviews on international affairs, human rights, literature, and
philosophy, she has made frequent appearances on radio and television. Her
writings have recently appeared in the
Wall Street Journal, Law &
Liberty, the
Jewish News Syndicate (JNS), Academic Questions,
the
American
Mind, and the
Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs, among
other places.