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Lovely Green Eyes [Paperback]

Arnost Lustig
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
RRP: £8.99
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Book Description

3 April 2003

Fifteen-year-old Hanka Kaudersová has ginger hair and clear, green eyes. When her family is deported to Auschwitz, her mother, father and younger brother are sent to the gas chamber. By a twist of fate, Hanka is faced with a simple alternative: follow her family, or work in an SS brothel behind the eastern front. She chooses to live, her Aryan looks allowing her to disguise the fact that she is Jewish. As the German army retreats from the Russian front, Hanka battles cold, hunger, fear and shame, sustained by her hatred for the men she entertains, her friendship with the mysterious Estelle, and her fierce, burning desire for life.

Lovely Green Eyes explores the compromises and sacrifices that an individual may make in order to survive, the way a woman can retain her identity in the face of appalling trauma, and the value of human life itself. This is a remarkable novel, which soars beyond nightmare, leaving the reader with a transcendent sense of hope.

(20021018)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage; New Ed edition (3 April 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0099448580
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099448587
  • Product Dimensions: 13.1 x 1.9 x 19.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 398,380 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

This is a major work of fiction... Czech-born Arnost Lustig, an Auschwitz survivor, writes about the Holocaust with such merciless clarity that at times one is ashamed to be human (Mail on Sunday )

Lustig has a wonderful talent for setting down the details of human misery and survival... He has faith in a soul that transcends the body...if I were a schoolteacher, I would teach this vivid picture of human evil as moral philosophy... A remarkable achievement (Independent )

Lustig survived Auschwitz. Every fibre of his latest book...resonates with the pain, questions and scars of the Holocaust (Daily Telegraph )

Lustig writes about the Holocaust experience with a modest authority that is virtually unique... His genius lies in his ability to understate themes and situations which cry out for melodramatic treatment (Lawrence L Langer Washington Post )

Wholly unsentimental and clean of self-pity, Lustig returns in his novels and stories to the harrowing landscape of his youth, discovering within its brutal boundaries the grim but still achingly recognizable panoply of a last, vast, various neighbourhood of man (Johanna Kaplan New York Times )

Book Description

'Lustig shows us that in language exists the power that often eludes us in life, the power to record, to accuse, to confess and most important, to renew and transcend' Mark Bautz, Washington Times (20021018)

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Customer Reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By Kali
Format:Paperback
Would you become a whore in order to survive? This is the question that A 15 year old Jewish girl Hanka Kaudersová asks herself when she is given the chance to pass herself off as a gentile in the concentration camp she and her family have been sent too during the last months of the war.

She is lucky to have "lovely green eyes", and reddish hair, she doesn't physically look Jewish and so she has a chance of life and she takes it even though she hates what she has to become in order to survive.

With all her family dead, her mother and younger brother sent straight to the gas chambers, her father choosing to throw himself on the camp's electric fence than to have to live in such terrible conditions, Hanka has no one left to call her own, all she has is her will to live but is it powerful enough to get her through the horrors ahead of her as she learns to ply her trade as a soldier's whore?

With many other girls, all older than she is, no one knows she is only 15 years old, she has pretended to be 18, Hanka or Skinny as she is known as has to service between 12 to 15 German soldiers each day and this she does even though she hates every moment of it.

Her virginity is lost in the brothel, only she knows this, though a German officer asks her with curious detached interest about her first sexual experience which Hanka tells him with equal detachment was "strange". The men she is forced to have sex with she has no feelings for, no passion, no desire, no love, no lust, nothing other than hatred and fear for what she must do in order to see the sun rise the next day.

However Hanka is a survivor, and her friendships with the other girls in the Brothel especially the enigmatic Estelle sustains her each and every dat and she does survive when all those around her perish one by one.

An evocative cruel read that leaves you wanting more even when the last page has been turned.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The real joy division was hell 18 Oct 2007
By Dr. Delvis Memphistopheles TOP 100 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
This book allows you to crawl into the mental space and ultimately into the skin of a young jewish girl trapped within an army brothel. It is in effect a psychological masterpiece- an expose of terror, the will to stay alive, how to maintain dignity and an expose on how empathy dissolves into a wet puddle of sperm, power and fear

I read it in one sitting- ensnared within the dark brilliance of the writing, a claustrophobic nightmare world which traps you within its strict confines, it reveals the other side of De Sadean nihilism- the victims story, but Lustig conveys it with a real sense of humanity, never going for the easy option of good versus evil but moving beyond- Lustig the superman of the abyss.

When I finished the book I shook myself back into the safety of the 21st century. Unless of course you live in the former Yugoslavia, Iraq or any of the post Soviet nations or sex work in the free west. Then of course, this book is your mirror.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Good book. 5 May 2003
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Lovely Green Eyes is the story of a 15 year old Jewish girl who is about to go to the gas chamber but instead she pretends to be an Ayran girl and ends up working in an SS brothel.The book follows her 2 weeks in the brothel,her escape and her attempts to come to terms with what she did afterwards.It`s a sad book and shocking to think that although this is a fictional story alot of what is detailed actually happened.I didn`t find it depressing though and think it is definitely worth reading.
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