The Plateau
By Maggie Paxson
By Maggie Paxson
By Maggie Paxson
Read by Maggie Paxson
By Maggie Paxson
Read by Maggie Paxson
Category: European World History
Category: European World History | Audiobooks
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Aug 13, 2019 | ISBN 9780698408739
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Aug 13, 2019 | ISBN 9781984888563
861 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
Praise for The Plateau:
“A lyrical book, by turns ungainly and graceful, dark and uplifting—right in step with the struggle ‘to be good when it’s hard to be good.’” — The Atlantic
“This radiant, anthropological history unearths the community’s tradition of caring for the displaced and reflects on whether goodness is innate.” – O, The Oprah Magazine
“The plateau, [Paxson] concludes, is a place ‘made holy by the aggregate acts of love within.’ … It could be an example again of what can be done for the refugees of today. One of the great tragedies of World War II was that there weren’t more such plateaus. It’s a tragedy, as Ms. Paxson’s book demonstrates, that continues to this day.” —The Wall Street Journal
“A loving combination of personal memoir, historical investigation and philosophical meditation.” — The Washington Post
“Powerful and engagingly written . . . The strength of her work lies in its refreshing blend of scientific rigor and openness to the intricacies and mysteries of the human heart. . . . [opening] the door to vulnerability, faith, love, and beauty, reminding us that they really will always draw us toward the light.” — Jewish Book Council
“Paxson’s beautiful writing threads these stories together so exquisitely that at times I had to stop and take a breath, even cry, before carrying on.” — BookPage (starred)
“Inspiring, riveting, and brilliantly researched and written, this is a book for our time by an author who has found her calling and risen with literary grace to a powerful challenge.” —Booklist (starred)
“Lyrical, complex, [and] genre-melding…History, memoir, profound soul-searching about peace, and meditations on the moral limitations of observation (rather than action) are woven together with dreamlike sequences imagining the lives of victims whose fates aren’t on historical record. The beautifully written, often heartrending narrative is as unforgettable as the region and individuals it brings to life.” —Publisher’s Weekly (starred)
“Multilayered, intimate .. Paxson is meticulous in her attention to … the way people live, their language, the choices people make in times of violence … An elegant, intensive study that grapples with an enormous idea: how to be good.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“Maggie Paxson went in search of human goodness and found a story that affected me in ways few books ever have. The Plateau is exquisite, excruciating, fearless – a book not only for these times, when our need for understanding is so great, but for all times. A masterpiece.” —David Finkel, author of The Good Soldiers and Thank You for Your Service
“After so much written about evil and pathology, here at last is a beautiful book that proves that selflessness is not a fairy tale. In describing an astonishing tradition of idealism and sacrifice, Maggie Paxson captures human goodness in all its complexity and ferocity.”
—Larissa MacFarquhar, author of Strangers Drowning
“Maggie Paxson takes us on this wondrous, probing journey in her search for the roots of kindness. How is it, she asks, that this one small place has so bravely stood up for strangers? The Plateau and the people you’ll meet in its pages are just the right antidote for these unsettling times.”
— Alex Kotlowitz, author of There Are No Children Here and An American Summer
“In a world that feels increasingly dark, Paxson’s remarkable search for parallels and paths to goodness between past and present, war and peace, is a heartbreaking and clear-eyed exploration of all that makes us human. She offers readers the key to survival: hope.” —Sarah Wildman, author of Paper Love: Searching for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind
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