Night

Night (The Night Trilogy #1)

4.25 of 5 stars 4.25  ·  rating details  ·  322,363 ratings  ·  12,120 reviews
A New Translation From The French By Marion Wiesel

Night is Elie Wiesel s masterpiece, a candid, horrific, and deeply poignant autobiographical account of his survival as a teenager in the Nazi death camps. This new translation by Marion Wiesel, Elie s wife and frequent translator, presents this seminal memoir in the language and spirit truest to the author s original inten

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Hardcover, 193 pages
Published May 8th 2009 by Steck-Vaughn (first published 1955)
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Kim
There is little that freaks me out more than the Holocaust. And I'm not belittling it at all with the phrase 'freaks me out.' Growing up in the 1970s and 80s, I felt sufficiently desensitized enough by television violence to be able to gauge how often I need to shake the jiffy pop and run to the bathroom before the program/violence resumes.

Elie Wiesel's Night brings me back to my senses, makes me hate the cold hearted bitch I've learned to be. And not by some overtly dramatic rendition of the ho...more
Stephen
This book is a hard, righteous slap in the conscience to everyone of good will in the world and should stand as a stark reminder of both: (1) the almost unimaginable brutality that we, as a species, are capable of; and (2) that when it comes to preventing or stopping similar kinds of atrocities or punishing those that seek to perpetrate such crimes, WE ARE OUR BROTHERS' KEEPERS and must take responsibility for what occurs "on our watch."

This remarkable story is the powerful and deeply moving acc...more
Kristen
A poignant and unforgettable 5 star read.

“Human suffering anywhere concerns men and women everywhere.” ― Elie Wiesel, Night

It's been years since I've read this book, but as my son needed to read it for school, I decided to read it with him. I'm glad I did.

Night, which is one man's tragic yet remarkable survival of the Holocaust, is a powerful, shocking, heartbreaking, poignant, yet triumph-of-the-soul biography. This book speaks to humanity about the atrocities man is capable of committing. It...more
Kat
Jul 16, 2012 Kat rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: anyone with a soul
Shelves: eyeopening
I teach this book yearly, but my students seemed distant from the true reality of the story. When I use the Holocaust Museum's interactive of Lola Rein's dress, it hits them. Real people, real history. The immediacy of the tragedy that was Wiesel's then comes to life in a way that a junior or senior can grasp. I also tell the story of my friend, Ida, and her "no grandparents". That is the hardest part for me as it is so personal. She was the daughter of survivors - she had no grandparents and I...more
Martine
This book has garnered so many five-star reviews and deals with such important subject matter that it almost feels like an act of heresy to give it a mere four stars. Yet that is exactly what I'm going to do, for while Night is a chilling account of the Holocaust and the dehumanisation and brutalisation of the human spirit under extreme circumstances, the fact remains that I've read better ones. Better written ones, and more insightful ones, too.

Night is Elie Wiesel's somewhat fictionalised acco...more
Paquita Maria Sanchez
I had trouble discerning whether this book was actually incredibly well written, or just horrifyingly honest enough to shock you into awe. What I have pulled from it is less the prose, and more the images burned in my brain from the chilling facts that they express. Having read The Lost, I was at least somewhat prepared for the places Wiesel was to take me, and the terror contained within this short volume is actually minor compared to the extensive atrocities researched and transcribed by Mende...more
BirdBrian's ghost
In this primary-source document, Elie Wiesel details his personal experiences in Auschwitz. His story is unique, but the existence of concentration camps, genocide, and forced labor are not. Wiesel's story is one data point in a larger trend of 20th century, and now 21st century atrocities which share many core similarities.

1918- (The Gulag Archipelago) The roots of the Soviet internal Gulag system dates back to Czarist times, where internal deportation to Siberia was a common fate of political...more
Jocelyn
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Xysea
Jul 07, 2008 Xysea rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: history buffs, almost anyone, really
What can I say that hasn't already been said?

This book is the newer translation, with some clarifications to the chronology of people and events, with introductions by Wiesel himself and the man who fought to have the book published, Francois Mauriac.

The prose is in a relatively simple style. After all, the story is dramatic enough; it needs no embellishment. It is as if you are watching the whole thing through a plate-glass window, and you're banging on it, yelling, 'Hey, hey you, they're tryin...more
Sean Gray
Jan 12, 2008 Sean Gray rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: eh
Recommended to Sean by: the michigan state board of education
Night, was possibly one of the worst books I've ever read. I was suprised when I logged on to find, Five star reviews of this book. Yeah, so it was written by a holocaust survivor. It doesn't make it well written. From a literary standpoing, purely. It was terrible. As Ms. Hawley would say, It lacked sentence variation. Maybe it was better when it was written in German? Maybe he should have let a "professional" writer, write it for him. I'm not bashing him, or his writing. Kind of. His writing n...more
Daniel
I had put off reading this story for a variety of reasons, main among them that I knew what I would be facing, and was eager to find an excuse not to. After having been to the Dachau Concentration Camp in Germany, the images of the now-dead ovens still linger somewhere in the recesses of my mind, and to back to it, to read from someone who went through it, was not something I readily wanted to do. But I did; I gathered myself up and read through in a couple of days, the end of the book taking me...more
Cathy DuPont
Since I've read a number of articles (mostly) and book excerpts about the Holocaust, I wasn't shocked by this diary of this 16 year-old Holocaust survivor. However, I found the book both very powerful and very sad. Sixteen and to have seen such a fight for life, watching friends and family murdered and dying in front of him. And questioning, where is God, has God abandoned me? Faith to believe in God is surely questioned.

Elie Wiesel, winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize, lost his mother, sister...more
Ancilla
How come there are people in this world who questioned that NAZI and holocaust really happened in the past?!!!!

Come on...
There are a lot of fact, stories and people who try to forget the nasty horrible moment which happened to them.
History is the past, which we never can change, can't we?

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Elie Wiesel Elie Wiesel adalah salah satu saksi hidup kekejaman NAZI dengan berbagai kamp konsentrasi untuk memusnahkan etnis Yahudi di daerah Eropa (Jerman d...more
Aubrey
You can't critique this book. You can like it, you can dislike it, but you can't reason out why. That would be an insult to the memory of this horrific time, and an insult to the man who lived through it and chose to cry out to the world against it. The most you can do is read it, and take away something from it. You can never fully understand the emotions this book encompasses, for the price of understanding is death, if not of the physical than of the mental. Read it, and know that this was no...more
K.D. Oliveros
May 09, 2011 K.D. Oliveros rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to K.D. by: Oprah Book of the Month
If Anne Frank was 13 when Germans came to Netherlands, Elie Wiessel was 15 when the same thing happened in Romania. Two teenage children who saw the atrocities of the German armies who were blinded by their loyalty to Hitler. There were a few differences: Anne Frank died in the concentration camp while Elie Wiessel survived. Anne Frank's diary, first published as The Diary of a Young Girl in 1950, was written in young girl's language while she was on a hiding while Night by Elie Wiesel tells the...more
JG (The Introverted Reader)
Honestly, I can't help but feel that for me to sit in judgment of a memoir of the Holocaust would be terribly presumptuous. We can't ever forget what happened, and any work that reminds us of what happened is important and should be read as widely as possible. The style is a little sparse for me, but do we really need lavish descriptions of crematoriums? I didn't think so. What is important is that Wiesel laid out his thoughts and feelings for all the world to see, an act of unimaginable courage...more
Anna
Jan 22, 2009 Anna rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: EVERY SINGLE PERSON.
Recommended to Anna by: Mrs. Recker


I loved this book. I loved the honesty, the horror, & the truth that was revealed, by this amazing person.

I had to read this book for my English class, & boy, my English class somehow found HUMOR behind this book. I was thoroughly agitated by their finding this funny. NOTHING was funny in this book. NOTHING is funny about what Hitler did. & NOTHING is funny about the burning of human bodies or especially BABIES, while they're STILL ALIVE.

I wanted to punch every person in my class for...more
Lorena
Jul 03, 2008 Lorena rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Lorena by: Sandra
If there is one book genre I dislike is biographies, in general I find biographies too suspicious, after all how do I know the writer kept a neutral view of his subject? And I find auto-biographies self serving, how many times you find page after page of the whining of people who paint a picture of their lives as horrific only to overcome it all to become … a mediocre writer, and we are supposed to feel amazed, sorry, I know exactly how I sound. So you have, in my opinion the victims who want re...more
Eric_W
We used this book for a class I was co-teaching which attempted to measure learning outcomes of community college students. It's an excellent book for getting discussions going and seeing how students relate to events of which they have no experience. As a holocaust book, however, I think there are better books out there, but to get a real sense it's important to read many. I still find Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil to be one of the most significant. Tw...more
Anna
Here's my caveat: although I think Night is very well written, and therefor rated it as such, I need to note that I believe that its author is one of the great current enemies of the Jewish people. Why? Because he tries to feed us profane and immoral answers (support the zionist agenda no matter what, embrace Israel as a fictive "Jewish homeland", condone a genocidal agenda toward the Palestinian people) in response to a series of sacred and enduring questions (as a Jewish people, what is our pl...more
Zenmoon

This book sat on the book-stand by my bed for a few weeks before I could bring myself to read it. I kept glancing over at it, picking it up, putting it down - wanting to read it, steeling myself to read it, daunted by the prospect of reading it, back and forth.

‘Night’ is a short, but disturbing memoir which details Elie Wiesel’s memories of the beginnings of Jewish deportation, from Hungary, in 1944, to the Nazi death camps of Germany. Elie writes about his subsequent incarceration, along with h...more
Daniel
Elie Wiesel's "Night" is such a widely read book, there's no need to describe the book itself. I'll instead focus here on my thoughts on rereading it for the first time since, if I remember correctly, I was a teenager. While I grew up hearing Holocaust survivors speak at my Hebrew school, seeing documentaries on the concentration camps, and spending a lot of time with the poems and pictures in "I Never Saw Another Butterfly," Wiesel's book likely was the first adult book I read by a Holocaust su...more
Heather
Apr 06, 2008 Heather rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone
I read this book almost entirely in one sitting. It felt like seeing a horrible accident that had just taken place, or watching craniofacial surgery on television--you want to close your eyes and block it out, but part of you just can't turn away. I know I will be haunted by some of the things I read in this book for a long time--but that is probably the price we should all pay to make sure something like the Holocaust can never happen again on this earth.

I honestly cannot comprehend how it eve...more
Emanuel
I might too stingy in giving stars for this book. A friend of mind recommended the book to me. My rating for this book doesn't mean that I discredited the book or dislike it. The book is good, and i love memoirs, especially those slice of life true story with past experiences, no matter if it's good or bad or worse experiences.

Weeks after i finished "Night", I got a dvd of movie called "Fateless", the movie is really good, but, the story very similar to Wiesel's "Night", I thought the movie was...more
Jennifer Randall
Elie Wisel (won '86 Nobel Peace Prize) a Holocaust survivor tells of the unending hell he and his father (and family) endured at the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps. Only Elie makes it out alive, and surpisingly, his father lasts throughout the year, or so, of sheer torment.

The book's theme quietly hints at one of the main objections to Christianity, and probably, Judaism: how could a loving God let such tragedies occur? Elie struggles iwht this throughout. In fact, he names the bo...more
Tania
Never shall I forget those moments that mudered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to ashes.


This book is a shocking and very personal account of the authors time spend in german concentracion camps. Night felt more real than any of the other holocaust memoirs I've read before, and I think this is because Elie tells you how he felt and not just what he saw.

I've never really thought about what it must have felt like to be very religious and then have all of these horrible events happen to yo...more
arcobaleno
Un'agonia di massa, silenziosa
Non avevo intenzione di leggerlo ora, ma dopo le prime righe non ho saputo più smettere... e sono andata avanti fino alla fine, trascinata dal quindicenne Eliezer, che racconta la sua deportazione, insieme al padre, nel '45.
E' la testimonianza dello sterminio degli ebrei nei campi di concentramento. E' una delle innumerevoli storie, simili fra loro, ma ciascuna col suo peso e la sua unicità, quelle che insieme hanno costruito la Storia.
E quando si comunica col cuo...more
Chana
I don't know if I have the right to review this book at all as what can one say? There really are no words, just tears. Still, I have thoughts about the book and I will share them.

When Eliezer Wiesel was a 15 year old boy, a student of Talmud and Gemorah, living with his family in Sighet, Translyvania, he and his family were put into a cattle car and transported to Birkenau. When they arrived, to the sight of the smoke stacks and the smell of burning corpses, to the mind-destroying sight of livi...more
Ben
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
HRH
This book was short but very difficult to get through. It isn't the sort of thing one likes to read after a hard day at work. It tells the true story of Elie Wiesel, a Romanian Jew who, at age 15, survived the horrors of four Nazi concentration camps between 1944 and 1945. And it ended abruptly which made me scour the internet for more information or some time of happier ending. The book was terrifying. With every incident I had to remind myself that this was not a novel, but a memoir and that,...more
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Eliezer Wiesel is a Romania-born American novelist, political activist, and Holocaust survivor of Hungarian Jewish descent. He is the author of over 40 books, the best known of which is Night, a memoir that describes his experiences during the Holocaust and his imprisonment in several concentration camps.

Wiesel was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986. The Norwegian Nobel Committee called him a "...more
More about Elie Wiesel...
Dawn (The Night Trilogy, #2) Day (The Night Trilogy, #3) The Night Trilogy: Night/Dawn/The Accident All Rivers Run to the Sea The Trial of God: (as it was held on February 25, 1649, in Shamgorod)

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“To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time.” 382 people liked it
“Human suffering anywhere concerns men and women everywhere.” 250 people liked it
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