Train_to_Budapest_Dacia_Maraini
2012 Nominated

Train to Budapest

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

1956: Amara, a young Italian journalist, is sent to report on the growing political divide between East and West in post-war central Europe. She also has a more personal mission: to find out what happened to Emanuele, her soul mate from before the war when both were children in Florence. Emanuele and his family were Jews transported by the Nazis from wartime Vienna, but not before he had sent Amara a long series of letters she still carries with her. Her quest now takes her on long train journeys. She visits the holocaust museum at Auschwitz, and Budapest, where she is caught up in the tumultuous events of the October rising against the Soviet Union. Amara is helped by chance travel companions, notably Hans, part Austrian and half-Jewish, who works as a surrogate father at weddings for brides orphaned in the war, and Hovath, an elderly Hungarian captured by the Russians after forced service with the German army outside Stalingrad in 1942. Along the way she meets many other survivors, each with their own story to tell, and ponders the troubled existence of her own parents in the oppressive world of Mussolini’s Italy. But did Emanuele survive the war or, like so many other Viennese Jews, did he die in Auschwitz or a ghetto in Poland?

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Dacia
Maraini

Dacia Maraini is an award-winning Italian writer whose work focuses on women’s issues

Maraini has written numerous plays and novels and has won several awards for her work, including the Formentor Prize for L’età del malessere (1963); the Premio Fregene for Isolina (1985); the Premio Campiello and Book of the Year Award for La lunga vita di Marianna Ucrìa (1990); and the Premio Strega for Buio (1999).

In 2013, Irish Braschi’s biographical documentary I Was Born Travelling told the story of Maraini’s life, focusing in particular on her imprisonment in a concentration camp in Japan during World War II and the journeys she made around the world with her partner Alberto Moravia and close friends Pier Paolo Pasolini and Maria Callas.

Dacia Maraini was shortlisted for The Man Booker International Prize 2011.

 

Dacia Maraini is an award-winning Italian writer whose work focuses on women’s issues

Maraini has written numerous plays and novels and has won several awards for her work, including the Formentor Prize for L’età del malessere (1963); the Premio Fregene for Isolina (1985); the Premio Campiello and Book of the Year Award for La lunga vita di Marianna Ucrìa (1990); and the Premio Strega for Buio (1999).

In 2013, Irish Braschi’s biographical documentary I Was Born Travelling told the story of Maraini’s life, focusing in particular on her imprisonment in a concentration camp in Japan during World War II and the journeys she made around the world with her partner Alberto Moravia and close friends Pier Paolo Pasolini and Maria Callas.

Dacia Maraini was shortlisted for The Man Booker International Prize 2011.

 

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
Italy
Original Language
Italian
Author
Publisher
Arcadia Books

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