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MEMOIRS
OF A FORTUNATE JEW –
DAN
VITTORIO SEGRE

MEMOIRS OF A FORTUNATE JEW
An Italian Story
Dan Vittorio Segre
Paperback,
Fourth printing November 2005
£10.99, 288pp 1 870015 69 X

Winner of the H.H.Wingate Prize for Non-Fiction 1987
Humour and irony characterise these memoirs of an extraordinary life,
explored with the full awareness of the historical reverberations of this
century. The author’s childhood was spent in Fascist Italy of the 1920s
and 1930s. Assimilated Jews, the family’s relationship to their country
was stronger than to their religion, and their subsequent fortunes and
misfortunes were intricately tied to what would prove to be conflicting
loyalties.
Nurtured in a world of aristocratic privilege, Segre emerged as an
adolescent, naive and unprepared for the realities that awaited him. The
crash of 1929 and the introduction of Mussolini’s anti-Jewish laws saw him
on the boat to Tel Aviv, a rare immigrant with a first-class ticket, jacket,
silk tie and detachable linen collar, thrust into the pioneering culture of
Palestine in the 1930s. Segre’s humour and irony explore the pathos and
contradictions of such situations which have characterised his life.
Former winner of the Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize, this reissue of
Segre’s memoirs describes his Italian birth, emigration to Palestine in
1938 and war in the British Palestine Army. Segre has since returned to live
in Italy after 50 years as a diplomat, academic and journalist in Israel.
Dan Segre now lives back in his family home in Italy after fifty years as a
diplomat, academic and journalist in Israel.
‘Luminous, almost light-hearted, autobiography about a family of Italian
Jews under Mussolini.’
Frederic Raphael,
Books of the Year, Sunday Times
‘The tone of Segre’s beautifully written autobiography, which reads
like a Bildungsroman, is certainly ironic rather than tragic.’
Adrian Lyttelton, The
New York Review of Books
'Imagine an Italian Jew from a prominent but impoverished Piedmont
family serving in the British Army alongside an Arab and under a Jewish
Palestinian sergeant, and you have in a nutshell the cultural confusion
Professor Segre so cannily explores in this labyrinthine, spell-binding
autobiography, full of passionate tenderness.’
Encounter
'A fascinating description of childhood in
Fascist Italy, a moving account of adolescence in Mandatory Palestine, an
extraordinary book, very sad and very funny at the same time.’
Walter Laqueur
'A haunting tale, beautifully written and with a talent, reminiscent of
Proust, to endow the past with a deep psychological meaning ... A stunning
exercise in self-awareness.’
Amos Elon
‘A spellbinding biography of genuine literary value that reads like an
adventure story. Those familiar with the bitter and depressing tone of the
Jews’ misfortunes in the maelstrom of wars and holocausts will derive a
unique freshness from the irony, humour and sensuality of Dan Segre, who
acknowledges that he is a fortunate Jew.’
A. B. Yehoshua
'He is good at reconstructing events and even better at the more difficult
art of recapturing moods and atmospheres ... an unusually attractive book -
attractive in its irony, its energy and its moral insight. Mr Segre had some
rich material to work with, and he has done it justice.’
John Gross, The New
York Times
‘The only thing most of us know clearly about Nazis is that they were
the scum of the earth, but this pathetic, marginal, and in the end rejected
Italian fascist does not fit into any Europe or any history that most of us
know ... He must be a man of extraordinary moral courage and self-knowledge,
since nowhere does he deal lightly with himself ... Maybe the final heroism
was to write this book ... I think this book is unique and a sort of
masterpiece.’
Peter Levi, The
Independent
‘This distinguished book has a structure as rigorously cut and shaped as
any novel. Segre’s good fortune, which many a novelist would envy,
consists in the end in his power to mould his diverse experiences into a
deeply satisfying symbol of modern life triumphing over the forces of
adversity. Even where so many were hideously defeated, we may rejoice over
one who survived and who has celebrated his luck in such captivating
fashion.’
Patrick Parrinder, London
Review of Books
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