The Rest Is Memory, Lily Tuck
The Rest Is Memory, Lily Tuck
List: $10.99 | Sale: $7.70
Club: $5.49

The Rest Is Memory

Author: Lily Tuck

Narrator: Elisabeth Rodgers

Unabridged: 2 hr 57 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 12/10/2024


Synopsis

THE HEARTBREAKING STORY OF A YOUNG CATHOLIC GIRL TRANSPORTED TO AUSCHWITZ BECOMES A RASHOMON-LIKE RONDO BY ONE OF OUR GREATEST NOVELISTS.

First glimpsed riding on the back of a boy’s motorcycle, fourteen-year-old Czeslawa comes to life in this mesmerizing novel by Lily Tuck, who imagines her upbringing in a small Polish village before her world imploded in late 1942.

Stripped of her modest belongings, shorn, and tattooed number 26947 on arriving at Auschwitz, Czeslawa is then photographed. Three months later, she is dead.

How did this happen to an ordinary Polish citizen? This is the question that Tuck grapples with in this haunting novel, which frames Czeslawa’s story within the epic tragedy of six million Poles who perished during the German occupation. A decade prior to writing The Rest Is Memory, Tuck read an obituary of the photographer Wilhelm Brasse, who took more than 40,000 pictures of the Auschwitz prisoners. Included were three of Czeslawa Kwoka, a Catholic girl from rural southeastern Poland. Tuck cut out the photos and kept them, determined to learn more about Czeslawa, but she was only able to glean the barest facts: the village she came from, the transport she was on, that she was accompanied by her mother and her neighbors, her tattoo number, and the date of her death. From this scant evidence, Tuck’s novel becomes a remarkable kaleidoscopic feat of imagination, something only our greatest novelists can do.

“Beautifully written, all the while instilling a sense of horror” (Susanna Moore), Tuck’s language swirls about, yet not a word is out of place. The subtly rotating images tumble out at us, accelerating as we learn about Czeslawa’s tragic stay in Auschwitz, the lives of real people such as the barbaric Commandant Rudolf Höss; his unconscionable wife, Hedwig; the psychiatrist and child rescuer Janusz Korczak; and the mordant Polish short story writer Tadeusz Borowski.

Although we are certain of Czeslawa’s fate, we have no choice but to keep turning the pages, thoroughly mesmerized by Tuck’s near otherworldly prose.

In Lily Tuck’s hands, The Rest Is Memory becomes an unforgettable work of historical reclamation that rescues an innocent life, one previously only recalled by a stark triptych of photographs.

“The Rest Is Memory is a literary resurrection, as shattering as it is astonishing. Lily Tuck has done the impossible; from darkness and hideous cruelty, she has woven an unforgettable paean to hope, to life, to justice.”—Junot Diaz

About Lily Tuck

Lily Tuck is the author of several novels: The Double Life of Liliane; I Married You for Happiness; Interviewing Matisse or the Woman Who Died Standing Up; The Woman Who Walked on Water; Siam, or the Woman Who Shot a Man, nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award; The News From Paraguay, winner of the National Book Award; the short story collections The House at Belle Fontaine and Limbo, and Other Places I Have Lived; and the biography Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Kate on December 08, 2024

I'm afraid I'd never heard of Lily Tuck before I read this short novel. I'm still trying to work out why since the writing is just exquisite. I listened to the audio version, which was beautifully read by Elisabeth Rodgers who, I imagine must have had to put any feelings to one side just to get throu......more

Goodreads review by Deborah on January 16, 2025

This stunning small book is a challenge to categorize. It tells the imagined life story of a real 13-year-old Catholic Polish girl who died in Auschwitz, whose camp intake photo appears on the book cover, one of tens of thousands of photos taken by a fellow prisoner, who survived the camp and lived......more

Goodreads review by Enchanted Prose on December 13, 2024

Deepening the impact on humanizing the inhumanity towards millions (Wólka Złojecka, Zamość region, southeast Poland; Auschwitz concentration camp, Oświęcim, Poland; 1939 to 1943): How did Lily Tuck have the emotional fortitude to undertake, research, and write The Rest is Memory? What does it say ab......more

Goodreads review by Cynthia on December 06, 2024

There isn’t anything flowery here to soften each blow. These aren’t invented characters assigned false heroics. This a brutal, realistic imagining of a young girl’s life, blended with many other lives, that were all exterminated in Auschwitz. If you want a beautiful book, don’t read this. It will no......more

Goodreads review by Terry on January 19, 2025

Sad historical fiction based on just a few months that this 14 year old Catholic Polish girl spent at Auschwitz before her death. The writing was good, but very disjointed. It is a short novel but the timeline and events go back and forth. The book is full of the sorrow and desperate feelings these......more