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Child of His Time

JL;DR SUMMARY Leslie Epstein's examination of Aharon Appelfeld's approach to writing and memory offers a profound meditation on the interplay between personal history and imagination. A way out west there was a fella, fella I want to tell you about, fella by the name of Jeff Lebowski. At least, that was the handle his lovin' parents gave him, but he never had much use for it himself. This Lebowski, he called himself the Dude. Now, Dude, that's a name no one would self-apply where I come from. But then, there was a lot about the Dude that didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. And a lot about where he lived, likewise. But then again, maybe that's why I found the place s'durned innarestin'.

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Tags

HolocaustJewish IdentityAutobiographyImaginationSurvivalMemoryLiteratureWriting ProcessAharon AppelfeldTrue Memory

Places mentioned

Israel
"Many years ago I asked Aharon Appelfeld, the great Israeli novelist, why he did not write an autobiographyeven though his best title, his only title, A Child of Our Time, had already been used."
Palestinian Territories
"Appelfeld, who survived a concentration camp as a child before immigrating to Palestine in 1946, begins by describing the equivocal relationship he and all survivors had with memory."
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
"Once, at Boston University, he gave a lecture based on one of its chapters."
Prut, Bacău, Romania
"the grown mans inextinguishable memories: his own mother in her print dress; his father handing him an ice cream cone, swimming with him in the river Prut"

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Cairo Item ID 77934
Cairo Source ID 10
Retrieved 2026-03-18 05:33:22 UTC
Curated 2026-03-18 08:31:22 UTC