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Thaisa Frank
The fiction of Thaisa Frank, according to the New York Times, works by "a tantalizing sense of indirection." Of her debut novel HEIDEGGER'S GLASSES Dan Chaon says "This is stunning work, full of mystery and strange tenderness. Thaisa Frank has written one of the most compelling stories of the... show more
The fiction of Thaisa Frank, according to the New York Times, works by "a tantalizing sense of indirection." Of her debut novel HEIDEGGER'S GLASSES Dan Chaon says "This is stunning work, full of mystery and strange tenderness. Thaisa Frank has written one of the most compelling stories of the Nazi Regime since D.M. Thomas's PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION. It is a book that will haunt you." Jim Moret of The Huffington Post has called it a "tour de force." And Publishers Weekly's starred review described Frank's vision of the Holocaust original and startling." Before publication, foreign rights were sold to Italy, France, Spain, Norway, Holland, Portugal, Poland, Brazil, Mainland Chine and Taiwan.HEIDEGGER'S GLASSES opens during the end of World War II in a failing Germany coming apart at its seams. The Third Reich's strong reliance on the occult and its obsession with the astral plane has led to the formation of an underground compound of scribes--translators responsible for answering letters written to those eventually killed in the concentration camps.Into this covert compound comes a letter written by eminent philosopher Martin Heidegger to his optometrist, a man now lost in the dying thralls of Auschwitz. How will the scribes answer this letter? The presence of Heidegger's words--one simple letter in a place filled with letters--sparks a series of events that will ultimately threaten the safety and well-being of the entire compound.Part love story, part thriller, part meditation on how the dead are remembered and history is presented, with threads of Heidegger's philosophy woven throughout, the novel evocatively illustrates the Holocaust through an almost dreamlike state. Thaisa Frank deftly reconstructs the landscape of Nazi Germany from an entirely original vantage point.According to Booklist, HEIDEGGER'S GLASSES is written in the spare minimal style that won Thaisa Frank admiration for her short story collections, among them A BRIEF HISTORY OF CAMOUFLAGE and SLEEPING IN VELVET. She is the co-author of FINDNG YOUR WRITER'S VOICE, which is used in MFA programs and has taught in the graduate programs of San Francisco State University, The University of San Francisco, and Honors English at the University of California at Berkeley. She has conducted numerous writing workshop and written essays, including a recent Afterward in Viking/Penguin's VOLTAIRE.Frank originally wrote the first 16 pages over twelve years ago, and discarded them because she didn't think of herself as a novelist. The 16 pages kept popping out--under tax forms, her child's lunch box--as if on marionette strings. When she got the galleys for the book she realized those 16 pages were the DNA of the book and the imagination has phalanges that reach far out into history. You can read about this on her blog and find out more about her at www.thaisafrank.com.
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Caffeine Reviews
Caffeine Reviews rated it 12 years ago
Lately I've been shying away from World War II books that deal with the holocaust and Nazism, because usually these stories are always so horrific, that it really saddens and depresses me to read them. After reading the premises of Heidegger's Glasses, I thought this might be an interesting and diff...
heidenkind
heidenkind rated it 12 years ago
Most of the really good stories are in the first half, and the stories do start to feel repetitive as the book goes on. But overall I really enjoyed it--very surrealist and introspective.
Maven Books
Maven Books rated it 12 years ago
The story was unique, set during WWII, but built around an imagined world of translators working for the Nazis to write unanswered letters from the dead (or soon to be dead). I was intrigued in the storyline, though parts of it were a bit odd, so I dug in to see where it went.The first half of the b...
A Book and A Review #2
A Book and A Review #2 rated it 14 years ago
I must say I was pretty disappointed at the end of this book. The book started off incredibly strong and then it dropped off for me. When I had first started it, I kept thinking 4.5 stars. Then I felt as though it kept dragging on and it was harder to keep my attention.
TheBecks
TheBecks rated it 14 years ago
This review also posted on my blog. I really enjoy reading stories about the Holocaust and about the people who have lived through it. I suppose that in a way, it helps me to gain perspective in my own life, and reminds me that there is goodness to be found in everything. The suffering of the Jewish...
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