The Sun at Midday: Tales of a Mediterranean Family
Books / Hardcover
Books › Biography & Autobiography › Women
ISBN: 067941763X / Publisher: Pantheon, January 1997
A memoir of an eccentric family describes growing up in the cosmopolitan worlds of North Africa, Florence, and Tokyo
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This astonishing memoir is the story of a family who always felt slightly foreign in every country and developed a chameleon-like ability to adapt to their surroundings. Gini Alhadeff was born in Alexandria, Egypt, and grew up in Cairo, Khartoum, Florence, and Tokyo. She draws on her own memory and that of her family to trace her Catholic upbringing, the Sephardic Jewish roots she discovered as a young woman, and the Italian colony on Rhodes where her paternal grandfather was a merchant banker until Mussolini's racial laws forced him to leave for Egypt. With a vivid gift for narrative, Alhadeff evokes the languid Alexandria of the early decades of this century (where her mother's family made its fortune in cotton) and some of its beguiling honorary citizens: a violet-eyed aunt who refused to have new slipcovers made for her sofa so President Nasser would find the worn ones when her house was impounded; a cousin who was taught the limits of reason by Wittgenstein at Cambridge and became a monsignor; a gynecologist uncle interned at Auschwitz and then Buchenwald, who lived to tell his tale with stark unsentimentality.
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