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This poignant and richly textured memoir
was originally written in Judeo-Spanish, the language of the Jews of
the Ottoman Empire and of Marcel Cohen’s own childhood; it was later
translated by the author himself into French. The book (which appears
in this edition both in English and the Ladino original) is, writes
Cohen, “more or less what my mind retains of the five centuries that
my ancestors spent in Turkey.” A haunting journey into personal and
collective memory, it is also a meditation on a dying language and in
fact a dying way of life—that of the Sephardic Jews of Salonica, Istanbul,
and other points east. In Search of a Lost Ladino includes
a thoughtful introductory essay, “Three Degrees of Exile,” by translator
Raphael Rubinstein, as well series of ink drawings by the well-known
Spanish painter to whom Cohen addresses his letter.
Born in the Paris suburb of Asnières in
1937, MARCEL COHEN is the author of many books of short narrative prose
in French. Several of his works have been translated into English, including
Mirrors and The Emperor Peacock Moth. He has also
published a collection of interviews with Edmond Jabès, From
the Desert to the Book. In 2002 the Académie Française
awarded Cohen the Prix Roland de Jouvenel. He lives in Paris.
RAPHAEL RUBINSTEIN is a poet and art critic whose
books include The Basement of the Café Rilke, Postcards
from Alphaville, and Polychrome Profusion: Selected Art Criticism
1990 - 2002. He is a Senior Editor at Art in America,
and in 2002, the French government presented him with the award of Chevalier
dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He lives in New York City.
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Paperback $13.95 126
pages ISBN 965-90125-4-3
Publication Date: February
2006