Nora Strejilevich was a young woman when her brother and other
family members and friends disappeared at the hands of the military
junta that held power in Argentina from 1976 to 1983. Ostensibly
part of a systematic campaign to eliminate left-wing terrorism, the
violence perpetrated by the junta far exceeded anything the
leftists ever dreamed of, enveloping not only the violent left but
other dissidents and innocent civilians as well, and particularly
targeting the Jewish population. A "desaparecida" herself,
Strejilevich survived kidnapping and torture to speak of her
experience with a dignified voice and a clear-eyed realism that
extends from one end of the political spectrum to the other.
In the first English translation of her elegant fictional memoir
"Una sola muerte numerosa," Strejilevich combines autobiography,
documentary journalism, fiction, magical realism, and poetry to
express the "choir of voices" of the more than 30,000 souls who
were imprisoned and abused. She engages the reader in the history
of a bloody military coup and state-sanctioned anti-Semitism,
exploring themes of exile, identity, and violence. Above all, "A
Single, Numberless Death" is Nora Strejilevich's gripping story of
survival.
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