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The Suitcase
The Suitcase
Oct 6, 2024 7:26 PM

Author:Frances Stonor Saunders

The Suitcase

*Winner of the PEN Ackerley Prize 2022*

'This is family history at its best... the words fizz off the page and flutter in the mind' Sunday Times

If you open that suitcase you'll never close it again.

Ten years ago, Frances Stonor Saunders was handed an old suitcase filled with her father's papers. Her father's life had been a study in borders - exiled from Romania during the war, to Turkey then Egypt and eventually Britain, and ultimately to the borderless territory of Alzheimer's. The unopened suitcase seems to represent everything that had made her father unknowable to her in life.

So begins a captivating exploration of history, memory and geography, as Frances Stoner Saunders decides to unpick her family's past.

Reviews

Absolutely compelling... It's an extraordinary achievement.

—— Edmund de Waal, author of The Hare with Amber Eyes

Intimate, affecting, elegiac - a remarkable exploration in the hands of a special writer.

—— Philippe Sands, author of East West Street

Frances Stonor Saunders is one of those writers you read no matter what she writes. She is that good... this is family history at its best... the words fizz off the page and flutter in the mind... [The Suitcase] will haunt you.

—— James McConnachie , Sunday Times

[An] intimate and enquiring family history... Sympathetic, erudite, mournful

—— Matthew Janney , Financial Times

Stonor Saunders...has a magpie-eye for the telling detail... [and] a vivid turn of phrase.

—— Robbie Millen , The Times

Frances Stonor Saunders vividly captures the horror and absurdity of life in the theatre of conflict, and human versatility... The Suitcase is...a study in the meaningful artifice of human experience.

—— Katherine Backler , Tablet

Excellent... The Suitcase intrigues and fascinates and causes the reader to reflect on the uneven fates of those families that survived the Holocaust and those that did not.

—— Timothy W. Ryback , Literary Review

A beautifully written, beautifully composed investigation into her [Saunders's] father's origins, and also the idea of a border. It still haunts me.

—— Adam Thirwell , Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*

[A] pacey, well-researched book

—— Frank Coughlin , Irish Independent

Well-researched . . . balanced

—— Charles Lysaght , Irish Times

Sean O'Driscoll's fair-minded examination of her extraordinary, often violent life . . . acknowledges her humanity and viciousness

—— Observer

An enthralling read told by Paul with great verve and an eye for the telling detail . . . The family's complex history is concisely and compellingly related

—— Literary Review

Visceral and illuminating. The extraordinary House of Dudley is the Tudor Game of Thrones. Paul has produced a painstakingly detailed first book with spirit and verve

—— The Wall Street Journal

Captivating and thought-provoking . . . Sheds immense light onto this often-overlooked family

—— Royal Studies Journal

The crowning jewel in its genre . . . I can't recommend this book enough. Unputdownable

—— Lindsey Fitzharris

When reading Joanne Paul's lively history of the house of Dudley, it is impossible not to be reminded of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall trilogy . . . Paul uses the experiences of the Dudleys to light up odd corners and backroom spaces of Tudor palace life

—— Mail on Sunday

Joanne Paul chronicles the meteoric rise and deadly fall of the Dudleys

—— BBC History Magazine

Joanne Paul reveals how the might of the Tudor dynasty was built on the blood and sweat of three generations of another family - the Dudleys

—— BBC History Magazine

Hugely entertaining

—— The Times, Best Books of Summer 2022

Fascinating

—— Catherine Fletcher , History Today

Praise for Joanne Paul's monograph on Thomas More

—— -

Brilliant and lucid. This is an original and illuminating work that should be compulsory

—— Suzannah Lipscomb

Fascinating. Paul shows an impressive mastery

—— Spiked

A powerful and thought provoking memoir . . . wonderfully human, it is a story of missed opportunities, disillusionment and hope that ultimately invites readers to ask themselves what it means to be free

—— Katja Hoyer , History Today

This vivid rendering of life amid cultural collapse is nothing short of a masterpiece

—— Publishers Weekly

Remarkable and highly original . . . Both an affecting coming-of-age story and a first-hand meditation on the politics of freedom

—— Caroline Sanderson , Editor’s Choice, Bookseller

A probing personal history, poignant and moving. A young life unfolding amidst great historical change - ideology, war, loss, uncertainty. This is history brought memorably and powerfully to life

—— Tara Westover, author of Educated

Unique, insightful, and often hilarious. . . Albania on the cusp of change, chaos and civil war is the setting for the best memoir to emerge from the Balkans in decades

—— Craig Turp-Balazs , Emerging Europe

A lyrical memoir, of deep and affecting power, of the sweet smell of humanity mingled with flesh, blood and hope

—— Philippe Sands, author of East West Street

Free is astonishing. Lea Ypi has a natural gift for storytelling. It brims with life, warmth, and texture, as well as her keen intelligence. A gripping, often hilarious, poignant, psychologically acute masterpiece and the best book I've read so far this year

—— Olivia Sudjic, author of Asylum Road

Lea Ypi's teenage journey through the endtimes of Albanian communism tells a universal story: ours is an age of collapsed illusions for many generations. Written by one of Europe's foremost left-wing thinkers, this is an unmissable book for anyone engaged in the politics of resistance

—— Paul Mason, author of Postcapitalism

This extraordinary coming-of-age story is like an Albanian Educated but it is so much more than that. It beautifully brings together the personal and the political to create an unforgettable account of oppression, freedom and what it means to acquire knowledge about the world. Funny, moving but also deadly serious, this book will be read for years to come

—— David Runciman, author of How Democracy Ends

A new classic that bursts out of the global silence of Albania to tell us human truths about the politics of the past hundred years. . . It unfolds with revelation after revelation - both familial and national - as if written by a master novelist. As if it were, say, a novella by Tolstoy. That this very serious book is so much fun to read is a compliment to its graceful, witty, honest writer. A literary triumph

—— Amy Wilentz, author of Farewell, Fred Voodoo

Illuminating and subversive, Free asks us to consider what happens to our ideals when they come into contact with imperfect places and people and what can be salvaged from the wreckage of the past

—— Azar Nafisi, author of Reading Lolita in Tehran

A young girl grows up in a repressive Communist state, where public certainties are happily accepted and private truths are hidden; as that world falls away, she has to make her own sense of life, based on conflicting advice, fragments of information and, above all, her own stubborn curiosity. Thought-provoking, deliciously funny, poignant, sharply observed and beautifully written, this is a childhood memoir like very few others -- a really marvellous book

—— Noel Malcolm, author of Agents of Empire

Free is one of those very rare books that shows how history shapes people's lives and their politics. Lea Ypi is such a brilliant, powerful writer that her story becomes your story

—— Ivan Krastev, author of The Light that Failed

Lea Ypi is a pathbreaking philosopher who is also becoming one of the most important public thinkers of our time. Here she draws on her unique historical experience to shed new light on the questions of freedom that matter to all of us. This extraordinary book is both personally moving and politically revolutionary. If we take its lessons to heart, it can help to set us free

—— Martin Hägglund, author of This Life

I haven't in many years read a memoir from this part of the world as warmly inviting as this one. Written by an intellectual with story-telling gifts, Free makes life on the ground in Albania vivid and immediate

—— Vivian Gornick, author of Unfinished Business

Lea Ypi has a wonderful gift for showing and not telling. In Free she demonstrates with humour, humanity and a sometimes painful honesty, how political communities without human rights will always end in cruelty. True freedom must be from both oppression and neglect

—— Shami Chakrabarti, author of On Liberty

A funny and fascinating memoir

—— White Review, Books of the Year

A rightly acclaimed account of loss of innocence in Albania from a master of subtext . . . Precise, acute, often funny and always accessible

—— The Irish Times

A remarkable story, stunningly told

—— Emma Duncan , The Times

A vivid portrayal of how it felt to live through the transition from socialism to capitalism, Ypi's book will interest readers wishing to learn more about Albania during this tumultuous historical period, but also anyone interested in questioning the taken-for-granted ideological assumptions that underpin all societies and shape quotidian experiences in often imperceptible ways

—— Hannah Proctor , Red Pepper

A classic, moving coming-of-age story. . . Ypi is a beautiful writer and a serious political thinker, and in just a couple hundred readable pages, she takes turns between being bitingly, if darkly, funny (she skewers Stalinism and the World Bank with equal deadpan) and truly profound

—— New York Times

Beguiling. . . the most probing memoir yet produced of the undefined 'transition' period after European communism. More profoundly a primer on how to live when old verities turn to dust. Ypi has written a brilliant personal history of disorientation, of what happens when the guardrails of everyday life suddenly fall away. . . Reading Free today is not so much a flashback to the Cold War as a glimpse of every society's possible pathway, a postcard from the future

—— Charles King , Washington Post
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