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Last Rites

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An accomplished historian delves into his own history: “An often witty and always fascinating—even entertaining—writer.”—TheWashington Post
In Confessions of an Original Sinner, an adroit blend of autobiography and personal philosophy, historian John Lukacs paused to set down the history of his own thoughts and beliefs. Now, in Last Rites, he continues and expands his reflections, this time integrating his conception of history and human knowledge with private memories of his wives and loves, and enhancing the book with footnotes from his idiosyncratic diaries. The resulting volume is fascinating and delightful—an auto-history by a passionate, authentic, brilliant, and witty man.
Lukacs begins with a concise rendering of a historical understanding of our world (essential reading for any historian), then follows with trenchant observations on his life in the United States, commentary on his native Hungary and the new meanings it took for him after 1989, and deeply personal portraits of his three wives, about whom he has not written before. He also includes a chapter on his formative memories of May and June 1940 and of Winston Churchill, a subject in some of Lukacs’s later studies. Last Rites is a richly layered summation combined with a set of extraordinary observations—an original book only John Lukacs could have written

 
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    • Booklist

      February 1, 2009
      In these writings concerned with his thoughts and beliefs rather than his life per se, the great twentieth-century historian touches on two major themes of his interpretive (and imaginative) A Thread of Years (1997) and At the End of an Age (2002). One is that the modern (or, more properly, Lukacs says, the bourgeois) age is over; its great intellectual construction, liberalism, exhausted. The other, more important, is that history as knowledge is personal and participant. Objective history is impossible, Lukacs maintains, for each person, including the historian and the thinker (lofty or humble) about history, is enmeshed in human relations and has particular perspectives on events. But those philosophical convictions do not monopolize Lukacs here. Vast and public as well as personal matters, including the connections of physics and history, Lukacs situation as a man of two nations (Hungary and America), Churchill (the subject of his most famous histories), and in the lovely, musical last chapter, his three wives, also fall within the purview of his thoughtful, measured prose.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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