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She found the diary and brought the world a message of love and
hope.
It seems as if we are never far from Miep's thoughts....Yours,
Anne
For the millions moved by "Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young
Girl, " here at last is Miep's own astonishing story. For more than
two years, Miep Gies and her husband helped hide the Franks from
the Nazis. Like thousands of unsung heroes of the Holocaust, they
risked their lives each day to bring food, news, and emotional
support to the victims.
From her own remarkable childhood as a World War I refugee to
the moment she places a small, red-orange, checkered diary --
Anne's legacy -- in Otto Frank's hands, Miep Gies remembers her
days with simple honesty and shattering clarity. Each page rings
with courage and heartbreaking beauty.
In this haunting memoir, Alison Gold gives a luminous account of
key moments in her life that brought her to be the writer she is.
They tell of her early activism; they tell of her descent into
alcoholism; they tell of her recovery; they tell of her discovery
of the power of writing to give a shape and meaning to a life.
Found and Lost is both a tender memorial to the extraordinary
people in her life, and a compelling tale of redemption. Starting
with her childhood experience of running her primary school 'Lost
and Found' depot, Gold develops, though a series of letters, a
meditation on ageing, friendship, loss and the forces that link us
to the dead. In the very act of writing, she begins to find a route
out of depression and grief. Alison Leslie Gold is best known for
her works that have kept alive stories from the time of the
Holocaust, stories of courage and survival - most famously her Anne
Frank Remembered, co-authored with Miep Gies (who risked her life
to protect the Frank family). She has never chosen to write about
her own life or what made her into a gatherer of other people's
stories, until now, in Found and Lost. For she has chosen to go
back to her childhood in order to chart the origin of her need to
save objects, stories, people - including herself - who she has
sensed to be on a road to perdition.
In The Woman Who Brought Matisse Back from the Dead, award-winning
author of Anne Frank Remembered and The Devil's Mistress, Alison
Leslie Gold presents the life of nun-cum-artist's model Claude
Boule. Inspired by a true story and told in spare, evocative prose,
this improbable, color-soaked life arc spans the art of Henri
Matisse and Andy Warhol, a convent in 1930s Nice, wartime Lyon,
postwar Paris, New York in the dazzling 60s on to millennium's end.
The Woman Who Brought Matisse Back from the Dead explores the
abstruse relationship between artist and model: Who transfixes
whom? The incidental, often travail-filled, life of Claude Boule -
impenetrable and inscrutable - serves as a poignant foil for
intimate views into the creative processes and behind-the-scenes
life of one of the 20th century's most momentous artists. The brash
assemblage of The Woman Who Brought Matisse Back from the Dead also
encompasses diverse uncelebrated but no less vividly tinctured
people whose lives were touched - erotically, devoutly,
unscrupulously and in other often unpredictable ways - by the
model's.
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