I am Fifteen - And I Don't Want to Die-E.P. Dutton & Company Inc
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Only fifteen when she experienced the events narrated in I Am Fifteen - And I Don't Want To Die, Christine Arnothy left Hungary four years later, in 1948. In 1949 she joined her fiancé in Paris, and was married. They worked at any jobs they could find, he as a chauffeur, she as a governess and chambermaid. Just before her daughter was born, both were unemployed, but they found a haven in Belgium, where her husband got work as a translator. While she was writing this book from the diaries kept during the siege of Budapest, Christine Arnothy was working in a bookshop. "No one knew", she writes, "that I would rather write books than sell them." It won the French Prix Vérité and was a great success in Paris, where one reviewer wrote : "It is modern war seen through the eyes of a young girl of 15, and that is at once moving and terrifying." E. Arnot Robertson calls her "a born writer". Miss Arnothy has written a second book, a novel, which will be published in 1957. |
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© E.P. Dutton & Company et Christine Arnothy
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San Francisco Chronicle, 6 juin 1956 San Francisco Examiner, 11 juin 1956 The New York Times, 15 juin 1956 L.A. Herald Express, juillet 1956 Christian Herald, août 1956 Long Island Newsday |
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© Christine Arnothy |