Christine Arnothy (1930–2015)
Författare till Jag är femton år och jag vill inte dö
Om författaren
Foto taget av: L'écrivaine Christine Arnothy à Deauville, septembre 1989.
Verk av Christine Arnothy
J'ai quinze ans et je ne veux pas mourir, Suivi de Il n'est pas si facile de vivre (1981) 29 exemplar
The Charlatan 3 exemplar
Picknick in Sologne 2 exemplar
Afrikai szél Regény 1 exemplar
Ik ben 15 jaar en ik wil niet sterven het beleg van Budapest door de Russen in 1944 : een autobiografie (2013) 1 exemplar
Der gefangene Kardinal 1 exemplar
Passaporto per l'Europa 1 exemplar
Taggad
Allmänna fakta
- Vedertaget namn
- Arnothy, Christine
- Namn enligt folkbokföringen
- Kovach de Szendrö, Christine
- Andra namn
- Dickinson, William (Pseudonyme)
- Födelsedag
- 1930-11-20
- Avled
- 2015-10-06
- Kön
- female
- Nationalitet
- France
Hungary (birth) - Land (för karta)
- France
- Födelseort
- Budapest, Hungary
- Bostadsorter
- France
Budapest, Hungary - Yrken
- writer
novelist - Relationer
- Bellanger, Claude (Père)
Mitterrand, François (Proche) - Priser och utmärkelser
- Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur
Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres
Croix d'or de l'Ordre du Mérite hongrois, Hongrie - Kort biografi
- Christine Arnothy was the pen name of Irène Kovach de Szendrö, born in Budapest to a Hungarian father and an Austrian mother who taught her French as her first language. The family survived World War II, including the siege of Budapest in 1945, and fled the city on foot afterwards, landing in the Kufstein refugee camp in Austria. The only thing Christine took with her was the daily diary of her experiences during the war years, written by candlelight, which became the basis of her most famous book, J'ai quinze ans et je ne veux pas mourir (I Am Fifteen and I Don't Want to Die). She studied at a French-speaking school in Austria and between 1950 and 1953, published several novels in Hungarian under the pseudonym Kriszta Arnóthy. She then moved to France, where she continued her studies at the Sorbonne in Paris. Her book J'ai quinze ans won the Grand prix Verité in 1954.
Her next novels, Dieu est en retard (God Is Late, 1955) and Il n'est pas si facile de vivre (It's Not So Easy to Live, 1957), describe the travels of a stateless young woman without a passport. Other novels included Le Cavalier Mongol (1976), for which she received the Prix de la nouvelle from the Académie française. In 1964, she married Claude Bellanger, founder and publisher of the newspaper Le Parisien Libéré, with whom she had two sons.
She also published three detective novels under the pseudonym William Dickinson, as well as writing for theater, radio, and television..
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Statistik
- Verk
- 52
- Medlemmar
- 754
- Popularitet
- #33,729
- Betyg
- 3.3
- Recensioner
- 9
- ISBN
- 140
- Språk
- 8
** Read this and be moved by the plight of a young innocent girl trapped in the midst of the horrors of war. **
How could anyone read this memoir and rate it at anything less than 5 stars? It is an achingly honest, heartfelt, no-holds-barred story of the author's own experiences in occupied Budapest during and after the Second World War, including the family's bid to escape first the city of Budapest, and later the country, to seek sanctuary in Austria. The atrocities that faced 15-year-old Christine in 1944 must have been horrendous to recall to memory and put down on paper. Christine's story, like Anne Frank's diary, is a Second World War account that should be read by all. Together with her parents and neighbours, in the cellars of their well-appointed apartment block, Christine is faced with relentless hunger, boredom, fear, death, sickness and terrible thirst. To venture upstairs into the apartments is to take one's life into one's own hands; to venture out onto the street, for water or for other commodities, is an indescribable risk. Over 40,000 civilians died in the battle that raged between the Germans and Russians in Budapest, from the end of 1944, and throughout much of 1945.
Christine's story doesn't end with the Second World War, but continues with the communist occupation, and the family's bid to escape to their humble cottage in the country, lying low to escape notice. Circumstances again become intolerable and the family make a bid for what they think will be their freedom in Austria, but which turns out to be a bleak refugee camp. Christine's story continues with yet another move to escape control and form a new life in another country, but this too will unsurprisingly be beset with difficulties as Christine faces prejudice and competition for work. Through it all this young girl is kept going by her ambition to write, her love and passion for writing, and her firm belief that she will one day succeed in this goal of hers to write successfully and to be read by many people.
Superbly written; each scene is brilliantly and vividly described, like a really good novel, without being in the least bit self-pitying. You can only emerge from the pages of this memoir full of admiration for the courage and self-determination for the young Christine and the many others of her generation who had the same horrors and the same tough future to face. An outstanding wartime survival story.… (mer)