By: Elie Wiesel
“The author…has built knowledge into artistic fiction.”—The New York Times Book Review Elisha is a young Jewish man, a Holocaust survivor, and an Israeli freedom fighter in British-controlled Palestine; John Dawson is the...
By: Elie Wiesel
Night is one of the masterpieces of Holocaust literature. First published in 1960, it is the autobiographical account of an adolescent boy and his father in Auschwitz. Elie Wiesel writes of their battle for survival, and of his battle with God for a...
By: Elie Wiesel
'Not since Albert Camus has there been such an eloquent spokesman for man.' --The New York Times Book ReviewThe publication of Day restores Elie Wiesel’s original title to the novel initially published in English as The Accident and clearly...
By: Elie Wiesel
Two decades before the Holocaust, when the Jews in an Eastern European village are accused of ritual murder after a Christian boy is missing, an innocent Jewish madman confesses to the crime, admonishing his fellow Jews to take an oath of silence if...
By: Elie Wiesel
Now in paperback, Wiesel's newest novel "reminds us, with force, that his writing is alive and strong. The master has once again found a startling freshness."—Le Monde des Livres A European expatriate living in New York, Doriel...
By: Elie Wiesel
The son of Reuven Tamiroff, who emigrated to America from Eastern Europe following World War II, discovers secrets from his father's past and sets out for Germany to avenge his brother's death by destroying his killer, an S.S. officer known as 'The...
By: Elie Wiesel
A profoundly moving novel about a Holocaust survivor's struggle to remember both the heroic and the shameful events of his past, and about his American-born son's need to assimilate his father's life into his own. 'A book of shattering force that...
By: Elie Wiesel
When their plane en route from New York to Tel Aviv is forced down by bad weather, five passengers seek refuge at a nearby house where they encounter their enigmatic host, known only as the Judge, who begins to interrogate them, forcing them to...
By: Elie Wiesel
From his early years with his loving Jewish family to the horrors of Auschwitz to his life as a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, Elie Wiesel tells his story. Passionate and poignant, All Rivers Run to the Sea is an unforgettable book of love and rage,...
By: Elie Wiesel
Night is Elie Wiesel’s masterpiece, a candid, horrific, and deeply poignant autobiographical account of his survival as a teenager in the Nazi death camps. This new translation by Marion Wiesel, Elie’s wife and frequent translator,...
By: Elie Wiesel
When the Six-Day War began, Elie Wiesel rushed to Israel. 'I went to Jerusalem because I had to go somewhere, I had to leave the present and bring it back to the past. You see, the man who came to Jerusalem then came as a beggar, a madman, not...
By: Elie Wiesel
As this concluding volume of his moving and revealing memoirs begins, Elie Wiesel is forty years old, a writer of international repute. Determined to speak out more actively for both Holocaust survivors and the disenfranchised everywhere, he sets...
By: Elie Wiesel
One of the great writers of our generation' (The New Republic) weaves together memories of his life before the Holocaust and his great struggle to find meaning afterwards. Included are Wiesel's landmark speeches, among them his powerful testimony at...
By: Elie Wiesel
Documents the Nobel Peace Prize-winning writer's encounters with individuals whose lives were irrevocably shaped by anti-Semitism and the holocaust, including an Auschwitz barracks-chief who forces him to recount the past to a group of self-educated...
By: Elie Wiesel
On August 12, 1952, Russia's greatest Jewish writers were secretly executed by Stalin. In this remarkable blend of history and imagination, Paltiel Kossover meets the same fate but, unlike his real-life counterparts, he is permitted to leave a...
By: Elie Wiesel
Tormented by feelings of loss and dispossession after spending his life fleeing first the Nazis and then the 1956 Russian invasion of Hungary, Gamaliel Friedman finally settles in New York, where he works as a ghostwriter and meets a fellow group of...
By: Elie Wiesel
Searching for the friend who saved him during the Holocaust, a man is compelled to question the very meaning of survival, in a story of memory, loss, and madness that reflects the history of the twentieth century. Reprint.