On La novia de Odessa:
«The most beautiful book that I have read in a long time. » Chris Marker, Libération
«At least five of these short stories are gems. » Allan Massie, The Scotsman
«With a mix of personal and family memories, secrets told to him by
friends and a systematic historical analysis, Cozarinsky
draws destinies representing the “political horror” that can be traced
throughout the entire 20th century. » Rene de Ceccatty, Le Monde
On El rufián
moldavo:
«An admirable rescue feat… The prints exquisitely exhumed by Cozarinsky
will not be forgotten. » Anderson Tepper, The Times
Literary Supplement
On Vudú urbano:
«This book is like his films: converted, diverse, perverse in that it
does not follow the mainstream… it always works against the current. » Guillermo Cabrera Infante
January 1945, the end of World War II. A young woman wrapped in a heavy
military cape that hardly protects her from the cold escapes through Polish and
Czech territories. She arrives in Vienna and then manages to reach Geneva,
where “some friends”, a powerful Croatian member of the church and a Hungarian
Franciscan monk, will be able to help her… Three years later, in 1948, she has
started a new life in Buenos Aires. It has not been easy, she still needs to
improve her Spanish, and she works hard in a restaurant kitchen to make a
living; she lives in Frau Dorsch’s boarding house,
but none of the other guests, mostly Rumanian and Hungarian emigrants know how
she managed to escape from Europe…
The young woman is haunted by a dark past and only the innocent
questions of her son Federico, conceived in Buenos Aires at the end of 1948,
keep her from forgetting it once and for all. “Stories are not made up, they
are inherited,” wrote Cozarinsky in his novel El rufián moldavo, and when Federico becomes an adult and takes
control of his own destiny, he will close the circle of that hidden life with
his own escape which will be an embarrassment for many surprising reasons.
If, as Novalis wrote, “the novel rises from the holes and crevices
of History”, Lejos de dónde
sprouts from a huge crevice in European History: Nazi crimes and the hiding of
identities to avoid punishment. He does this with great skill, weaving
surprisingly parallel biographies and bringing about coincidences that are as
fragile as the boundaries between good and evil.
Edgardo Cozarinsky was born in
Buenos Aires in 1939. In 1974 he moved to Paris and, since 1988, he lives
between Buenos Aires and the French capital. He is a film director as well as a
writer, and has directed numerous movies such as La Guerre d’un seul homme,
Le violon de Rothschild, Fantômes
de Tanger, and Ronda nocturna, all of which blur the
limits between fiction and documentary and which have won awards and been paid
homage in the Musee du Jeu
de Paume in Paris and in the most prestigious
international film libraries. Among his most outstanding literary works are the
essays Museo del chisme (Gossip Museum, 2005), El pase del testigo (The Next
Witness, 2001); the books of short stories Vudú urbano (Urban Voodoo, 1985) – with a
prologue by Susan Sontag and Guillermo Cabrera Infante
–, La novia de
Odessa (Odessa’s Girlfriend,
2001), and Tres Fronteras (Three Frontiers, 2006); and the novels El rufián moldavo (The
Moldavian Scoundrel, 2004) and Maniobras nocturnas (Night Maneuvers, 2007).