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In Fragmented Lives, Gulag survivor Jacques Rossi opens a window
onto everyday life inside the notorious Soviet prison camp through
a series of portraits of inmates and camp personnel across all
walks of life--from workers to peasants, soldiers, civil servants,
and party apparatchiks. Featuring Rossi's original illustrations
and written in a tone as sharp and dry as that of Russian writer
Varlam Shalamov, Rossi's vignettes are also filled with surprising
humor. A former agent in the Spanish Civil War and a lifelong
Communist, Rossi never considered himself a victim. Instead, in the
manner of Primo Levi, Solzhenitsyn, and Margaret Buber-Neumann, he
sought to share and transmute his experience within the living hell
of the Gulag. In so doing, he gives voice to the inmates whose
lives were shattered by one of the most corrupt and repressive
regimes of the twentieth century. An impassioned reminder to always
question one's beliefs, to have the courage to give up one's
illusions at the risk of one's life, Fragments of Life lays bare,
with acute observations and biting wit, the falsity of the Soviet
utopia that transformed Rossi's home into a "huge Potemkin village,
a farcical sham dissimulating oceans of mud and blood."
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