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Interpreters (eBook, ePUB) - Eckstein, Sue
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When Julia Rosenthal returns to the suburban estate of her childhood, the unspoken tensions that permeated her seemingly conventional family life come flooding back. Trying to make sense of the secrets and half truths, she is forced to question how she has raised her own daughter -- with an openness and honesty that Susanna has just rejected in a very public betrayal of trust. Meanwhile her brother, Max, is happy to forge an alternative path through life, leaving the past undisturbed. But in a different place and time, another woman struggles to tell the story of her early years in wartime…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
When Julia Rosenthal returns to the suburban estate of her childhood, the unspoken tensions that permeated her seemingly conventional family life come flooding back. Trying to make sense of the secrets and half truths, she is forced to question how she has raised her own daughter -- with an openness and honesty that Susanna has just rejected in a very public betrayal of trust. Meanwhile her brother, Max, is happy to forge an alternative path through life, leaving the past undisturbed. But in a different place and time, another woman struggles to tell the story of her early years in wartime Germany, gradually revealing the secrets she has carried through the century, until past and present collide with unexpected and haunting results. In her devastating and beautifully understated second novel, Sue Eckstein takes the reader on a skilfully plotted journey where our growing awareness of Julia and Max's true heritage is in stark contrast to Julia's own interpretation of the past. Interweaving universal themes -- the nature of identity, the meaning of family, the emotional legacy of the past -- Interpreters magnificently unravels the impact of a war that resonates across four generations.

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Autorenporträt
Sue Eckstein (1959-2013) was a lecturer, novelist and playwright. She studied drama at Walnut Hill School of Performing Arts, Massachusetts, USA before going on to read English Literature at Durham University. Eckstein taught English as a Foreign Language and later English Literature at Colombo International School, Sri Lanka, where she was given a work permit on the condition that she wrote a traditional pantomime for the school. Three pantomimes later, she returned to the UK where she joined Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) and worked as a programme manager in Bhutan and The Gambia. On her return to the UK, she devised, set up and managed VSO¿s Overseas Training Programme. In 1999 she joined The Centre of Medical Law and Ethics at King¿s College London, where she was Director of Programme Development, specialising in ethical issues in medical research. From 2007, she was Lecturer in Clinical and Biomedical Ethics at Brighton and Sussex Medical School where, in addition to teaching ethics, she created optional humanities-based modules for medical students. Eckstein co-wrote and produced The Mrs Hoover Show, a show for children under ten, at the Komedia Theatre, Brighton, in 2000. The Tuesday Group was performed in London in 2003 as part of King¿s College London¿s Art of Dying festival, with a cast of high-profile professional actors including Phyllida Law, Gina McKee and Amanda Mealing. Her first radio play, Kaffir Lilies, was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 2006. Laura, another play for BBC Radio 4, was broadcast in 2008 and Old School Ties in 2009. Her dramatisation of her first novel, The Cloths of Heaven (Myriad, 2009), was broadcast on Radio 4¿s Woman¿s Hour in March 2010. Her second novel, Interpreters, was published by Myriad in 2011 and won the People¿s Book Prize 2012-13. Eckstein had a DPhil in creative writing from the University of Sussex.