The Pianist

ebook / ISBN-13: 9781780222684

Price: £8.99

ON SALE: 8th December 2011

Genre: Poland / The Holocaust

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

The bestselling memoir of a Jewish pianist who survived the war in Warsaw against all odds.

‘We are drawn in to share his surprise and then disbelief at the horrifying progress of events, all conveyed with an understated intimacy and dailiness that render them painfully close… riveting’ OBSERVER

On September 23, 1939, Wladyslaw Szpilman played Chopin’s Nocturne in C-sharp minor live on the radio as shells exploded outside – so loudly that he couldn’t hear his piano. It was the last live music broadcast from Warsaw: That day, a German bomb hit the station, and Polish Radio went off the air.

Though he lost his entire family, Szpilman survived in hiding. In the end, his life was saved by a German officer who heard him play the same Chopin Nocturne on a piano found among the rubble. Written immediately after the war and suppressed for decades, THE PIANIST is a stunning testament to human endurance and the redemptive power of fellow feeling.

‘The images drawn are unusually sharp and clear… but its moral tone is even more striking: Szpilman refuses to make a hero or a demon out of anyone’ LITERARY REVIEW

Reviews

You can learn more about human nature from this brief account of the survival of one man throughout the war years in the devastated city of Warsaw than from several volumes of the average encyclopaedia
Gerald Jacobs, Independent on Sunday
A book so fresh and vivid, so heartbreaking, and so simply and beautifully written, that it manages to tell us the story of horrendous events as if for the first time . . . His account is hair-raising, beyond anything Hollywood could invent . . . Everything that has been most horrific in life in 20th-century Europe is encompassed in this exquisite memoir
Daily Telegraph
What really stays with the reader is the chilling, almost naive immediacy with which the story is told . . . The Pianist is an icy, nerveless but remarkably readable memoir that takes us as close as we are ever likely to travel to the day-to-day reality of living through terror
Sunday Times
This memoir of a Jewish pianist who survived the war in Warsaw is one of the most powerful accounts ever written
Sunday Tribune
The images drawn are unusually sharp and clear, but its moral tone is even more striking: Szpilman refuses to make a hero or a demon out of anyone
Literary Review
Vivid and anguished . . . compulsive reading
Richard Overy, Sunday Telegraph
A compelling, harrowing masterpiece
Independent
We are drawn in to share his surprise and then disbelief at the horrifying progress of events, all conveyed with an understated intimacy and dailiness that render them painfully close . . . riveting
Lisa Appignanesi, Observer