His complacent life disrupted by a new patient's declaration that he is his half-brother, psychologist Alexander Lescziak, the son of Polish émigré parents, is forced to confront painful truths about his life as he envisions his mother's relationship with a German prisoner of war. Reader's Guide included. Reprint.
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"Powerful . . . Compelling . . . Hypnotic . . . A profound exploration of a man at war with himself."
"--The Boston Sunday Globe
""Exquisite prose, at once delicate and muscular. This deeply felt novel adroitly juxtaposes the intellectual, the emotional, and the sensual. Probing questions of who we are merge seamlessly with the tumult of emotional upheaval and the sensation of flesh caressing flesh."
"--Chicago Tribune
""Busch examines many facets of memory, guilt, love, forgiveness, denial, holding on, and letting go. In this way, he takes a narrowly focused narrative--one man's worries, real and imaginary--and transforms it into a peek into the emotional legacy of the twentieth century."
"--Richmond Times-Dispatch
""Irresistible . . . A novel of startling psychological intensity that explores the rewriting of history, or the imagining of it. . . . It's to Busch's credit that he's able to turn his kaleidoscope with such graceful, tantalizing precision; as Alex's search for morsels of truth turns obsessive, Busch's snapshots become addictive."
--Salon.com
"Beautiful, harrowing . . . In Busch's skilled hands, past and present merge to become a sublimely haunting yet gorgeously uplifting account of one man's need to bridge the great gulf dividing heart and mind, body and soul."
--"Elle
""SOME OF THE STRONGEST WRITING OF BUSCH'S RICH CAREER."
--"Book" magazine
"Busch is a mature, elegant writer who is particularly good at exposing the vulnerabilities of male-female relationships. . . . He's also a master of narrative understatement. . . . [He] has an extraordinary ability to observe and describe the subtext of what goes on between friends, colleagues, and couples. He understands the way the human mind dips, dives, and makes astonishing associations, while on the outside people behave in familiar, even predictable ways."
"--The Cleveland Plain Dealer
"""A Memory of War" draws its power from its chara
Frederick Busch (1941-2006) was the recipient of many honors, including an American Academy of Arts and Letters Fiction Award, a National Jewish Book Award, and the PEN/Malamud Award. The prolific author of sixteen novels and six collections of short stories, Busch is renowned for his writing's emotional nuance and minimal, plainspoken style. A native of Brooklyn, New York, he lived most of his life in upstate New York, where he worked for forty years as a professor at Colgate University.
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