All Our Worldly Goods by Irène Némirovsky - ISBN: 9780099520443
Paperback
Love, war, and family secrets collide in pre-war France.

All Our Worldly Goods

  • Paperback

    272 pages

  • Release Date

    1 September 2009

Summary

Reads like a prequel to Suite Française, but is a perfect novel in its own right - a gripping story of family life, of money and love, set against the backdrop of France in two terrible world wars.

From the author of the bestselling Suite Française.

Pierre and Agnès marry for love against the wishes of his parents and the family patriarch, the tyrannical industrialist Julien Hardelot, provoking a family feud which cascades down the generations. Even when war is imminent and Pi…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780099520443
ISBN-10:0099520443
Author:Irène Némirovsky, Sandra Smith
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:272
Release Date:1 September 2009
Weight:192g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm x 17mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“A beautiful writer - lucid, bright … She misses nothing.” The Times

A gorgeous novel - witty, tender and true * Financial Times *
A remarkable novel…beautifully translated… Her voice, compassionate yet always shrewd, with its sharp portrait of France at war and during the optimistic and confused Twenties and early Thirties, is always distinctive * Literary Review *
Némirovsky’s great bourgeois tragedy is modest in scale but epic in scope. Her highly distinctive style, the delicate but relentless accretion of finely observed detail, produces a story in which universal cataclysm mirrored in apparently insignificant personal destiny, to extraordinary resonant effect – Jane Shilling * Sunday Telegraph *
A coolly crafted traditional family novel – A S Byatt * Guardian *
Némirovsky’s last stories are a living history of the occupation, written in real time * Sunday Times *

About The Author

Irène Némirovsky

Irène Némirovsky was born in Kiev in 1903, the daughter of a successful Jewish banker. In 1918 her family fled the Russian Revolution for France where she became a bestselling novelist, author of David Golder, Le Bal and other works published in her lifetime or soon after, as well as the posthumous Suite Française and Fire in the Blood. In July 1942 she was arrested by the French police and interned in Pithiviers concentration camp, and from there immediately deported to Auschwitz where she died in August 1942.

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