“On 11 April 1987, a day of bright spring sunshine, Primo Levi fell to his death in the block of flats where he lived in Turin in northern Italy. He died in the same building where, in 1919, he had been born. The authorities pronounced a verdict of suicide. Levi, at only sixty-seven, had pitched himself three flights down the stairwell: life had become intolerably dark and cheerless for him.” is the opening paragraph of the Introduction to this biography.
Primo Levi* (1919-1987) was born in Turin, Italy. He was a scientist (physics and chemistry), a partisan, an enthusiastic mountaineer and an author of fiction and nonfiction. To quote author Ian Thomson: ”In Italy, Levi is a national monument.”.
But Levi was Jewish and a partisan, and was first sent to an internment camp in Italy and from there to the German concentration camp Auschwitz.
At Auschwitz he had become 174517, indicating that he was no longer a person, but simply an object, either to be destroyed or to be used as slave labour. Levi was grilled about his education, his knowledge, his thesis and his experience. ”Levi’s knowledge of physics, or rather physical chemistry, seemed to have impressed Pannwitz: physics, quite as much as chemistry, helped to save Levi’s life at Auschwitz.” He was employed in a laboratory until the end of the war when the survivors of these camps were finally liberated. Primo Levi wrote his famous testament of what he saw and experienced** at Auschwitz: ’Se questo è un uomo’/‘If This Is a Man’.
Ian Thomson interviewed Primo Levi nine months before Levi died, and he also interviewed as many friends, acquaintances and colleagues as possible. Levi was much more than prisoner 174517, and so the reader learns about his family and friends, his love of nature and mountaineering (he was fit and slim), his partisan work, subsequent capture and internment as mentioned above, as well as his work after leaving Auschwitz. Levi’s writing is discussed; he wrote novels, poems, essays and memoirs. He was friends with and knew several authors including Natalia Ginzburg, Italo Calvino, Philip Roth and others.
Included in this fine biography are photographs, notes, an introduction and a preface, a bibliography and an index.
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*Primo Levi is not to be confused with Carlo Levi, the author of ‘Christ Stopped at Eboli’, who was related to Primo Levi through marriage.
**”On his emergence from the P-M-Abteilung, Oscar contemptuously wiped some engine grease off his hand on to Levi’s shoulder, using him as a convenient rag. Forty years later Levi said this was the ‘greatest insult’ of his life; it was typical of the writer in Levi to see the large offence in the apparently small act.”