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Average rating4.3
Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of the Year Final reflections on a happy life-from acclaimed historian Tony Judt. Tony Judt's The Memory Chalet is a memoir unlike any other. Each essay brings the smallest details of personal experience into the larger frame of history. Judt's youthful love of a London bus route becomes a reflection on public civility. Food and trains and smells all come alive as Judt takes us from the postwar London of his childhood through Paris, Prague, and points east to New York, where he found his home. Judt brings his moral clarity and wit to bear on everything from fast cars to radical politics and, finally, the devastating illness that took his life. This book, composed when Judt was paralyzed and unable physically to write, found its shape in the ordered rooms of a Swiss Chalet of the mind: a warm refuge in the closing darkness of his final years. Judt's book, Ill Fares the Land, republished in 2021 featuring a new preface by bestselling author of Between the World and Me and The Water Dancer, Ta-Nehisi Coates.
Reviews with the most likes.
Tony Judt dictated this book while suffering from ALS, a disease that causes you to slowly lose all motor function until eventually death with no impact on your ability to think and feel. A tragic, unique, and profound perspective to look back on a life.
He knows how to pick and choose snapshots from his past that both capture that era as well as providing context on the state of the world and how it differs to today.
I love a good book on the beautiful moments found in a memory from a writer who knows how to write. There is no way anyone reading the final lines of the book isn't feeling something.