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  • Published: 15 December 2007
  • ISBN: 9781590172476
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $45.00

Unforgiving Years




A New York Review Books Original

 

Unforgiving Years is a thrilling and terrifying journey into the disastrous, blazing core of the twentieth century. Victor Serge’s final novel, here translated into English for the first time, is at once the most ambitious, bleakest, and most lyrical of this neglected major writer’s works.

 

The book is arranged into four sections, like the panels of an immense mural or the movements of a symphony. In the first, D, a lifelong revolutionary who has broken with the Communist Party and expects retribution at any moment, flees through the streets of prewar Paris, haunted by the ghosts of his past and his fears for the future. Part two finds D’s friend and fellow revolutionary Daria caught up in the defense of a besieged Leningrad, the horrors and heroism of which Serge brings to terrifying life. The third part is set in Germany. On a dangerous assignment behind the lines, Daria finds herself in a city destroyed by both Allied bombing and Nazism, where the populace now confronts the prospect of total defeat. The novel closes in Mexico, in a remote and prodigiously beautiful part of the New World where D and Daria are reunited, hoping that they may at last have escaped the grim reckonings of their modern era.

 

A visionary novel, a political novel, a novel of adventure, passion, and ideas, of despair and, against all odds, of hope, Unforgiving Years is a rediscovered masterpiece by the author of The Case of Comrade Tulayev.

  • Published: 15 December 2007
  • ISBN: 9781590172476
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $45.00

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Praise for Unforgiving Years

  • "A worker, a militant, an intellectual, an internationalist by experience and conviction, an inveterate optimist, and always poor...He took part in three revolutions, spent a decade in captivity, published more than thirty books and left behind thousands of pages of unpublished manuscripts, correspondence and articles. He was born into one political exile, died in another, and was politically active in seven countries...His refusal to surrender to either the Soviet state or the capitalist West assured his marginality and consigned him to a life of persecution and poverty. Despite living in the shadows, Serge's work and his life amount to a corrective to Stalinism, and an alternative to the market." -Susan Weissman
  • "Serge searingly evoked the epochal hopes and shattering setbacks of a generation of leftists...Yet under the bleakest of conditions, Serge's optimism, his humane sympathies and generous spirit, never waned. A radical misfit, no faction, no sect could contain him; he inhabited a lonely no-man's-land all his own. These qualities are precisely what make him such an inspiring, even moving figure." -Bookforum
  • "I know of no other writer with whom Serge can be very usefully compared...For Serge the value of the truth extended far beyond the simple (or complex) telling of it." -J.Berger