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Unforgiving Years by Victor Serge
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Unforgiving Years

by Victor Serge

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69292,213 (4.25)32
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NYRB Classics (2008), Paperback, 368 pages

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  efay | Apr 28, 2009 |
Unforgiving Years is certainly not summer reading. With elements of Solzhenitsyn and John Le Carre (with a little romance), it isn’t War and Peace either. I picked it up at the Andover [MA] Public Library on spec. not thinking there was much chance I'd get through it. BTW, it’s a paperback with rather small writing for its 341 pages. It's a spy novel spanning the Second World War and beyond. It details the ambivalence, deceit, and futility of it all. ( )
1 vote mckall08 | Feb 27, 2009 |
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Around seven in the morning, D personally loaded his two suitcases into the taxi.
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What is conscience? A residue of beliefs inculcated in us from the time of primitive taboos until today's mass press? Psychologists have come up with an appropriate term for these imprints deep within us: the superego, they say. I have nothing left to invoke but conscience, and I don't even know what it is. I feel an ineffectual protest surging up from within a deep and unknown part of me to challenge destructive expediency, power, the whole of material reality, and in the name of what? Inner enlightenment? I'm behaving almost like a believer. I cannot do otherwise: Luther's words. Except that the German visionary who flung his inkwell at the devil went on to add, "God help me!" What will come to help me?
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From the back cover:
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 a t 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 of 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 the 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 beautify 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.

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