9.2 /10 1 Votes9.2
5/5 Barnes & Noble Country Germany Publication date 1962 Media type Print (Hardback) Original title Die Nacht von Lissabon Publisher Harcourt | 4.2/5 Published in English 1964 Originally published 1962 Genre War story Page count 244 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Similar Arch of Triumph, The Black Obelisk, Flotsam, A Time to Love and a Time to Die, Spark of Life |
The night in lisbon by erich maria remarque mpl book trailer 124
The Night in Lisbon (German: Die Nacht von Lissabon) is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque published in 1962. It revolves around the plight of two German refugees in the opening months of World War II. It is the story of one refugee telling his story to another during the course of a single night in Lisbon. The story he recounts is mainly a romantic one, and also contains a lot of action with arrests, escapes and near-misses. The novel is realistic, Remarque was himself a German refugee (although the novel is fictional and only loosely based on the experience of Remarque 's friend, novelist Hans Habe), and provides insight into refugee life in Europe during the early days of the war. The book completed what was known as Remarque’s "emigre trilogy" along with Flotsam and Arch of Triumph. It was Remarque's last completed work.
Contents
Plot summary
The story takes place in the opening months of World War II. Josef Schwarz is a refugee who offers his visa and tickets for America to another refugee desperate to leave Lisbon. He does this in exchange for keeping him company throughout one night, a night in which he relates the story of his and his wife’s frantic flight from Nazi Germany to Lisbon.
Reception
The NIght in Lisbon became an immediate bestseller in America and Britain when published in English in 1964, remaining on the New York Times Top Ten list for five months. In his review for the Times, Maxwell Geismar called it a "most brooding and thoughtful novel… it may not quite be a great novel, but it is surely one of the most absorbing and eloquent narratives of our period." In a 1964 book review, Kirkus Reviews called the book "limp with romantic despair and frayed cynicism making the experience of dislocation and the concentration camps more acceptable to an audience which has avoided it before... Remarque's old following will find that it has a certain urgency without perhaps pausing to wonder whether it is as real as it is readable." Charles Poore wrote in his review for The Times; "It is a brilliant novel and a strange one, not completely successful but hauntingly moving."