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Anne Garvey is transfixed by a linguistic journey.

August 4, 2016 10:24
Elena Lappin: intricate crossing of cultures with an English consummation

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What Language Do I Dream In?By Elena Lappin
Virago, £14.99
Reviewed by Anne Garvey

This intriguing memoir throws a unique light on the fortunes of a young woman - her travels, her cultural inheritance and, most of all, her languages. Elena Lappin's tale is an archetype of post-war political upheaval, her travels and migrations a reflection of world events. But it is also an extraordinarily personal account of a modern life that is uniquely Jewish.

Lappin was born in Prague to Russian parents who had left the Soviet Union, disillusioned by its repression. She grew up in a golden era of Czech cultural life and recalls her childhood in their new home and her sense of honeyed warmth and excitement from Prague's summers and winters, times spent with her inquisitive young compatriots discussing philosophy in the open air and the magazines she set up at school.

Her younger brother Maxim, now a German novelist of note, is an eccentric but loving presence in a genial, if guarded, intellectual family where the parents, talented and adaptable, create a happy life for their children.