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The Emperor of Lies [Paperback]

Steve Sem-Sandberg
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 672 pages
  • Publisher: Faber and Faber (5 Jan 2012)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0571259219
  • ISBN-13: 978-0571259212
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.6 x 4.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 53,254 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Steve Sem-Sandberg
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Review

'Sem-Sandberg's achievement is that this history becomes but a background to a multitude of vivid characters, whose experiences he weaves expertly into a mesmerising whole ... a novel about heart-wrenching suffering and extraordinary evil, transformed by Sem-Sandberg's talents into an irresistible work of fiction.' -- Guardian >> Fiction of true moral force, brilliantly sustained and achieved . . . stunning. -- Hilary Mantel >> Scene after scene comes vividly to life. . . A memorable examination of human resilience and the will to survive. . . a most distinguished addition to the literature of the holocaust.' -- Daily Express >> This brutally vivid narrative [is] a compelling homage to a community wiped off the map. -- Scotland on Sunday >> With this book, Sem-Sandberg steps into the magic circle of leading European writers. . . It is the humanity of the storytelling, so rich and vivid and yet under such complete control, which entices the readers of this dark book . . . [a] masterly novel. --Independent >> Sem-Sandberg's recreation of the Lodz ghetto, utterly convincing, rich in sympathy and understanding, is more a lightly fictionalised documentary than a work of the imagination. --Allan Massie, Scotsman

Irresistable . . . absorbing from first page to last . . . Dickens would have been very pleased with this novel.' -- --Guardian

Review

"Mesmerizing...An irresistible work of fiction, absorbing from first page to last...Dickens would have been very pleased with this novel."--Carmen Callil, "The Guardian "(London)

"Was Rumkowski a sinner or a saint? Collaborator or a liberator? It is around this central question that "The Emperor of Lies" swirls, providing along the way. . . cinematic detail that invites immersion in the way few contemporary novels of serious ambition do."--Daphne Merkin, "The New York Times Book Review""A resolute masterpiece, "The Emperor of Lies "looks for truths in the great domain of dissolving syntax and shadows we call history....A great achievement."--Sebastian Barry, "Salon"


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
66 of 67 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Some Holocaust issues have remained controversial. The institution The Jewish Council, or as it was known in German as the "Judenrat" is one of them. Were the heads and members of the Councils collaborators and traitors or heroes who have done all they could in order to save their berthren from the evil machine of the Nazi hordes?
This is the subject of "The Emperor of Lies", whose hero or anti-hero is Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, an elderly Jewish businessman, who was chosen to be the leader of the Lodz ghetto in Poland, the second greatest Jewish ghetto there. This ghetto was established by the Nazis in February 1940 and it hosted a quarter of a million Jews. It was separated by barbed wire. Rumkowski,or "King Chaim", as he was better known, was cynical, ambitious, devious, monarchical, devilish, arrogant, cunning, vain and " uneducated who resorted to the coarsest of threats and insults" and with whom "no one even wanted to share a table". He managed to establish a whole industry of workshops manufacturing many products to be sent to the Nazi army and administered tens of thousands of Jews under the slogan which he created, namely: "Our only way is Work". This is a reminder of what the Nazi beasts engraved at the entrance of Auschwitz: "Arbeit Macht Frei". Thus starts the odyssey of the reader into the dark, sombre and tragic times of the ghetto, and whose fate is well known. The novel is a stupendous achievement, because of some reasons.
First, this is a great work of imagination, which manages to recreate not only the ghetto but also the historical context of it. The book has many and various characters and episodes which come all alive and the reader has the impression that he is watching each and every moment of them.
Second, the narrator is there, sometimes commenting but most of the time remaining or trying to remain neutral, letting you, the reader, decide on major issues and alternatives. There are comic episodes as well, all of which are supported by newspaper reports from those times photos, messages and broadcasts.
In addition,there are the Jewish crooks, the smugglers, the prostitutes, the common people,
the tailors, the piano tuner and players, the doctors and carpenters, the secretaries, the Jewish orphans as well as the SS henchmen who populate most of the plot, most of them telling their stories in the form of flashbacks or short monologues. The same goes for additional characters, such as the Rumkowski family members. There are authentic passages in Hebrew, Polish and Yiddish which were not translated and left in the original. The same goes for the jokes,sayings, prayers and aphorisms, which appear in the original. Here is the point where I would like to praise the job done by the traslator of the book, who has done a brilliant job. The language is smooth and simple, yet rich and sometimes proverbial.
Personally, I believe that Rumkowski was a dirty old fellow, a traitor and an opportunist. Suffice it to mention the words of Adam Czerniakow, the head of the Warsaw Jewish ghetto. Here are his words:
"We had a meeting with Rumkowski today.
The man is unimaginably stupid, self-important, officious. He goes on and on about his own splendid qualities. Never listens to what anybody else says.
He's dangerous, too, because he insists on telling authorities that all is well in his little reserve".
One is definitely familiar with the famous speech delivered by Rumkowski in 1942 after getting an order from the Nazis to gather tens of thousands of people, including many children and sick Jews, to be deported to the planet of hell Auschwitz. This speech called : "Give me your Children" is the high and turning point of the novel. It is from here onwards where the reader can only come to one conclusion, although Mr. Sandberg does not pass any judgement on Rumkowski. Hans Biebow, who was the German administrator of the ghetto and the darling of Rumkowski, has only comtempt for the old Jew and utters this:
"You are an old man from an obsolete age, Rumkowski. You thought you could buy yourself power and influence, that you could go on extending your perverse and filthy nest within the walls of a Greater Power and then carry on embezzling and misappropiating just as people like you have done so many times before throughout history, as it is in your nature to do. But let me tell you something, Rumkowski: that age is now past. That age is auf ewig vorbei".
The end is well known: everybody perishes or is murdered at Auschwitz or other crematoria. There are no winners, only losers.
This book will haunt you for many years to come. In spite of some extremely horrible and graphic scenes, it will be engraved on you memory whether or not you like Rumkowski and his other members of the Jewish Council. A great novelist is living among us, hitherto unknown, but from this point onwards marking his place in the pantheon of the greatest writers of humanity.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By Mary Whipple HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
It is really no overstatement to compare Swedish author Steve Sem-Sandberg's epic novel about the people in the Lodz ghetto during World War II to Tolstoy's War and Peace, published almost one hundred fifty years earlier. The real life dramas which the book illustrates, the memorable characters, the carefully developed themes which Sem-Sandburg treats in new ways, and the magnitude of the horrors easily make this book the equal of Tolstoy's epic. The nature of the subject matter, of course, precludes any hint of romanticism here, but Sem-Sandburg is so good at varying scenes involving a series of fully human, repeating characters, that I cannot imagine any reader not becoming fully engaged with them. Beautifully written to memorialize the people of the ghetto, rather than the horrors of the Holocaust itself, this book is an awe-inspiring literary achievement.

Taking place between 1940 and 1944, the novel opens with two contrasting passages. The first, a memorandum from December, 1939, announcing the Germans' intention to enclose the two hundred twenty-thousand Jews in Lodz within a ghetto--"a temporary measure." In the second passage, a scene from September 1 - 4, 1942, Mordechai Chaim Rumkowsky, Chairman of the Jews' Ruling Council of Elders, must give the population news so inhuman and so devastating, that the Chairman of the Warsaw ghetto, took cyanide rather then give that same news to his own people. Ten thousand residents, chosen from babies and children under the age of ten and "elderly" over the age of sixty-five, were to be handed over to the Gestapo for immediate "relocation."

After Rumkowsky makes the dreaded announcement in September, 1942, the novel backs up to 1940, providing details from Rumkowski's life and the lives of others in the ghetto, along with other decisions he has had to make in the months leading up to September, 1942. His goal has always been utilitarian--"the greatest good for the greatest number" so that ultimately some of the population could be saved from the Germans, primarily because they had become so productive that they were essential to the German war effort.

Wonderful repeating characters from various levels of society come alive here, among them Mara, a paralyzed mystic, the daughter of a rabbi; Vera Schulz, a young woman who develops an underground life; Adam Rzepin, a young street urchin who fears nothing and who has a sister who hears angels; Rosa Smolenska, the loving teacher who runs the orphanage on the outskirts of the ghetto; and Stanislaw Stein, a young orphan who finds a new home. Not all the ghetto characters are good. Street gangs and Jewish crooks act as bullies and shake down those who need favors, including the head of the ghetto police and a member of the Resettlement Commission, who is getting rich from bribes.

Throughout Rumkowsky's administration, there are also domestic issues over which he has little real control but which the German administration expects him to solve: food riots by starving people, epidemics, strikes by workers, horrific overcrowding, and the psychological trauma of the population as truckloads of "recycled" clothing, smelling of disinfectants, arrive every day, some still containing personal possessions.

Ultimately, as history tells us, Rumkowski runs out of options, and his tenure as head of the ghetto remains a controversial subject. Some believe that he was heartless, morally bankrupt, inhuman. Others, especially some who survived their eventual deportation, believe that Rumkowski was their savior--they lived because they were able to earn enough food by working. This novel provides a wide perspective from which to regard his actions. Mary Whipple
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
By J. H. Bretts TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Steve Sem-Sandberg uses the novel form to explore one of the most controversial figures in the Holocaust, Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, the 'Elder' who was the spokesperson for the Jews in the Lodz ghetto in Poland. Rumkowski was in effect the 'king' of the ghetto, a vain dictator who issued his own Ghetto currency and postage stamps, backed up by his own police force. Rumkowski thought that by working with his German captors he could somehow save 'his people' - but he was just a dupe of the Nazis. (It isn't a matter of historical hindsight: many of the people around him realised it at the time.) Sem-Sandberg's uses a vast cast of historical figures and fictional characters to paint an all too vivid picture of what it must have been like to live in this hellish universe, where hunger and fear turned moral values upside down. Sem-Sandberg is Swedish but his range and depth of storytelling reminded me more than anything of the great Russian novelists. This vast book is a challenging read - but is also endlessly thought-provoking and humane. Recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
'Labour is the ROCK OF ZION! Labour the FOUNDATION OF MY STATE! HARD,...
An amazing and horrific account of life in the Lodz Jewish ghetto - second largest in Poland. The head of the ghetto, Chaim Rumkowski, set to turning 'his' town into an industrial... Read more
Published 1 day ago by sally tarbox
Very poor book, a huge missed opportunity.
I have read extensively about the Lodz Ghetto and MC Rumkowski. This book has a number of failings. Firstly it lacks flow and is very difficult to follow. Read more
Published 7 days ago by CFS198
The Emperor of Lies
I couldn't believe that life in the wartime ghettos could have been anything but horrendous for the inmates until I read this book. Read more
Published 1 month ago by lifelongreader
Epic story of human struggle and delusion
What does it take to rule over a ghetto of two hundred and fifty thousand Polish Jews, when food and fuel are scarce, and your Nazi taskmasters impose ever harsher work quotas and... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jeremy Bevan
An insightful read
This is an extraordinary piece of Literature that I think really must be read. The book centres on life in a Jewish ghetto, mixing both fact and fiction, giving the reader an... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Ms. S. J. Green
Too long
This book is too long by half. Where was the editor? The author should have spared us the hallucinatory ramblings of ghetto victims
Published 3 months ago by menapia
harsh, uncomfrotable and a stark reminder of how brutal humans can be...
Hard to read at times and brutal aspects of the Ghetto are illustrated in stark reality of just how hard life was in a place where systematic starvation was happening. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Teabag
A Labour of Love
This is a hard book to read, but well worth the effort. At times it was difficult to seperate the enormous background research iin facts from the dramadocumentary style of... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Michael Ward
The Emperor Is King
A rip roaring roller coaster of a novel, a Dickensian flight through Polish ghettos during the Nazi occupation. Well worth a read
Published 7 months ago by andybee
Fact or fiction?
I was initially dubious about the idea of a novel about these events, but I'm also aware that there is a real difference between reading any number of factual and historical... Read more
Published 9 months ago by S. K. Lewicki
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