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Description edit see section history

Julie Orringer’s astonishing first novel—eagerly awaited since the publication of her heralded best-selling short-story collection, How to Breathe Underwater (“Fiercely beautiful”— The New York Times )—is a grand love story and an epic tale of three brothers whose lives are torn apart by... read more

Characters/People edit see section history

  • Andraska "Andras" Levi: One of three Hungarian-Jewish brothers who leaves for Paris to study architecture.
  • Klara Morgenstern: A French Hungarian woman in her early 30s who is a ballet instructor described by Andras as a woman with "quiet, astonishing beauty." Andras is enamored with her.
  • Tibor Levi: Oldest of the three Levi brothers who plans to study medicine in Italy.
  • Elza Hász: The wife of a Budapest bank director who asks a favor of Andras to transport a package to her son in Paris.
  • The Elder Mrs. Hasz: Elsa Hasz's mother-in-law who asks Andras to mail a letter once he arrives in Paris.
  • Zoltán Novak: Manager of the Sarah-Bernhardt Theater whom Andras met while traveling to Paris on the train.
  • József Hász: Son of Elza Hász who is attending architecture school at the Beaux-Arts in Paris while Andras attends the less prestigious École Spéciale.
  • Auguste Perret: Andras' instructor in History of Architecture described as sporting a "short triangular beard with wax-curled moustaches" and a rimless pince-nez.
  • Pierre Vago: Andras' instructor in Atelier, which is a combination of draftsmanship and painting. He originally served as French-Hungarian translator and later assists Andras in practicing and improving his French.
  • Rosen: Apparent leader of several Jewish architecture students who befriend Andras. Rosen is described as tall, lanky, freckled with unruly red hair.
  • Ben Yakov: Handsome Jewish architecture student in Rosen's group.
  • Eli Polaner: Jewish architecture student in Rosen's group described as "small and light-boned, with a neat, close-shorn head and tapering hands. Becomes Andras' ally.
  • Madame Marcelle Gérard: Lead actress in "The Mother," which is playing at Sarah-Bernhardt Theater where Andras is employed as a "gopher." Introduces Andras to Claire.
  • Mátyás Levi: Andras' younger brother who is interested in immigrating to the United States to become an actor.
  • Elisabet Morgenstern: Claire's 16 year old daughter who at first believes that Andras desires her and is attempting to win her mother's permission to date her.
  • Monsieur Forestier: Designer and constructor of stage sets for whom Andras works as apprentice.
  • Ilana di Sabato: Young Orthodox Jewish girl who elopes, escorted on train by Tibor, to marry Ben Yakov.
  • Mendel Horovitz: Andras' former classmate in Hungary, member of the Hungarian Olympic team during the 1936 trials and Jewish laborer in the Labor Services Company 112/30 of the Hungarian Army. He was not allowed to participate in the games when he informed the team secretary that he was Jewish.
  • Frigyes Eppler: The Jewish Journal editor who hired Andras.
  • Miklos Klein: Young Jewish man in Budapest who assists other Jews at no charge to flee Hungary for Palestine.
  • Major Kozma: The sadistic commander of the Hungarian 79/6th
  • Captain Erdö: Director of a play held at the officers' training school for which Andras and József serve respectively as set designer and artistic director. He assists Andras by being a courier for correspondence between Andras and Klara.
  • Szolomon: Jewish road surveyor for the Hungarian 79/6th who requests the services of Andras and József as assistants after the previous assistant was killed by a land mine.
  • Tamas Levi: Andras's Son born during the war
  • Flora Levi: Andras's Mum
  • Bela Levi: Andras's Dad
  • Klara Levi: Andras's daugther
  • Adam Levi: Tibor's son
Show all 28 characters
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Quotes edit see section history

  • “He could no sooner cease being Jewish than he could cease being a brother to his brothers, a son to his father and mother.”
  • “In the end, what astonished him the most was not the vastness of it all—that was impossible to take in, the hundreds of thousands dead from Hungary alone, and the millions from all over Europe—but the excruciating smallness, the pinpoint of which every life was balanced.”
  • Popular Highlights from Kindle Customers
  • Why would a man not argue his own shameful culpability, why would he not crave responsibility for disaster, when the alternative was to feel himself to be nothing more than a speck of human dust?
    Highlighted by 191 Kindle customers
  • May God direct your steps toward tranquility and keep you from the hands of every foe. May you be safe from all misfortune on this earth. May God grant you mercy in his eyes and in the eyes of all who see you.
    Highlighted by 176 Kindle customers
  • “And what if I fail?” “Ah! Then you’ll have a story to tell.”
    Highlighted by 146 Kindle customers
  • It was like love, he thought, this crumbling chapel: It had been complicated, and thereby perfected, by what time had done to it.
    Highlighted by 120 Kindle customers
  • He had the strange sensation of not knowing who he was, of having traveled off the map of his own existence.
    Highlighted by 116 Kindle customers
  • (Engineering Marvel! Paris-trained architect-engineer Andras Lévi has designed an invisible bridge. The materials are remarkably lightweight and it can be constructed in almost no time. It is undetectable by enemy forces. Tests suggest that the design of the bridge may still need some refinement; a battalion of the Hungarian Army mysteriously plunged into a chasm while crossing. Some argue, however, that the bridge has already attained its perfect form).
    Highlighted by 110 Kindle customers
  • But when he thought of the word mercy, it was the Yiddish word that came to his mind: rachmones, whose root was rechem, the Hebrew word for womb. Rachmones: a compassion as deep and as undeniable as what a mother felt for her child.
    Highlighted by 102 Kindle customers
  • palimpsestic architectures in which the familiar concealed the strange and terrifying. In this inside-out reality, the secret of Klara’s identity had become a secret kept from her, rather than one held by her; now Andras, no longer deceived, had agreed to become his wife’s deceiver.
    Highlighted by 60 Kindle customers
  • lemniscate of smoke drifting from his pipe, was its own special brand of torture.
    Highlighted by 21 Kindle customers
  • tatterdemalion relic. On Friday he walked home alone, too dispirited to join the others at the Blue Dove—and there on the entry table was a white envelope with his name on it, the response he’d waited for all week. He tore it open in the foyer. Andras, you’re very welcome. Please visit us again sometime. Regards, C. MORGENSTERN. Nothing more. Nothing certain. Please visit us again sometime: What did that mean? He sat down on the stairs and dropped his forehead against his knees. All
    Highlighted by 19 Kindle customers
Show all 12 quotes from this book

Setting & Locations edit see section history

  • Budapest: The novel opens here.
  • Paris, France: Andras attends architecture school in Paris.
  • Latin Quartier: Paris area where Andras lives and the École Spéciale is located.
  • Ecole Speciale: Architecture school that Andras attends
  • Nice, France: Klara takes Andras to Nice beach cottage for his 23rd birthday.
  • Modena, Italy: Where Tibor attends medical school
  • Carpatho-Ruthenia: Andras serves on Labor Services Company 112/30 of the Hungarian Army within this territory which is the area annexed by Hungary from Czechoslovakia after Germany took back the Sudetenland.
  • Debrecen, Hungary: The town where Andras' parents moved once they sold their home.
  • Bánhida: The Hungarian area that Andras works in a coal mine and power plant.
  • Ukraine: Andras, József and Mendel join the labor servicemen of the Hungarian 79/6th.

Organizations edit see section history

First Sentence edit see section history

Later he would tell her that their story began at the Royal Hungarian Opera House, the night before he left for Paris on the Western European Express.

Table of Contents edit see section history

Part One: The Street of Schools
1. A Letter
2. The Western European Express
3. The Quartier Latin
4. Ecole Speciale
5. Theatre Sarah-Bernhardt
6. Work
7. A Luncheon
8. Gare d"Orsay
9. Bois de Vincennes
10. Rue de Sevigne
11. Winter Holiday

Part Two: Broken Glass
12. What Happened at the Studio
13. Visitor
14. A Haircut
15. In the Tuileries
16. The Stone Cottage
17. Synagogue de la Victoire
18. Cafe Bedouin
19. An Alley
20. A Dead Man

Part Three: Departures and Arrivals
21. A Dinner Party
22. Signorina di Sabato
23. Sportsclub Saiint-Germain
24. The S.S. Ile de France
25. The Hungarian Consulate

Part Four: The Invisible Bridge
26. Subcarpathia
27. The Snow Goose
28. Furlough
29. Binhida Camp
30. Barna and the General
31. Tamas Levi
32. Szentendre Yard
33. Passage to the East

Part Five: By Fire
34. Turka
35. The Tartars in Hungary
36. A Fire in the Snow
37. An Escape
38. Occupation
39. Farewell
40.Nightmare
41. The Dead
42. A Name
Epilogue

Series & Lists edit see section history

This book is in Amazon Book Club Picks. (authoritative list)
This book is in Big Fat Books. (community list)
This book is in Rainy Day Books (Staff Picks for 2010). (community list)

Authors & Contributors edit see section history

  1. Julie Orringer (Author)

First Edition edit see section history

Original Language: English
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf
Country: United States
Publication Date: 2010
ISBN: 9781400041169
Page Count: 602

Classification edit see section history

  • Library of Congress: PS3615.R59168 2010
  • Dewey: 813.6

More Books Like This edit see section history

   
  • Stones from the River
  • The Book Thief

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