Woman of Letters: Irène Némirovsky and Suite Française

Front Cover
Olivier Corpet, Garrett White
Five Ties Publishing, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 159 pages

Produced with the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York, and IMEC, the French foundation that holds the Nemirovsky archive,Woman of Lettersexplores the life of Irene Nemirovsky, author of the million-selling novelSuite Francaise. Born in Kiev in 1903, Nemirovsky immigrated to France during the Russian Revolution. A celebrated Parisian writer between the wars, she died in Auschwitz in 1942.

Compiled with Nemirovsky's daughter, Denise Epstein,Woman of Lettersincludes reproductions of more than one hundred photographs, letters, and documents from the family archive. The preface by Museum of Jewish Heritage Director David Marwell and Olivier Corpet addresses the current controversy surrounding accusations that Nemirovsky, though Jewish, wrote earlier works that could be considered anti-Semitic.Woman of Lettersincludes a translation, by Sandra Smith, of the last short story published in the author's lifetime, along with notes forCaptivity, the unfinished third volume ofSuite Francaise. The book will accompany a traveling exhibition, on view at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York through 2008.

The book contains an interview with Denise Epstein by Olivier Corpet; a short story, "The Virgins," by Irene Nemirovsky; notes forCaptivity; and a chronology of the life of Irene Nemirovsky by Olivier Philipponnat and Patrick Lienhardt.

Olivier Corpetis founder and director of IMEC (l'Institut Memoires d l'Edition Contemporaine), the largest nongovernmental literary archive in France.

Garrett White, founder of Five Ties Publishing, is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn. His translations includeAn Unspeakable Betrayal: Selected Writings of Luis Bunuel.

From inside the book

Contents

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Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Olivier Corpet is founder and Executive Director of IMEC (l'Institut Mmoires d l'dition contemporaine), the largest non-governmental literary archive in France, which holds the archive of Irne Nemirovsky.

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