Description
Arrested with her family in her native Holland, deported, held in a series of Nazi concentration camps, and orphaned - all by the age of seven - Emmie Arbel transformed her childhood survival into a lifelong mission to stand against any such other horrors.
With her home now in Israel, to where she and her brother emigrated with their foster-parents in the wake of the Holocaust, she still frequently travels abroad to report and record her testimony. Working closely with Emmie herself, the acclaimed German graphic artist Barbara Yelin has created a brilliant portrait - what she calls a "visual biography" - of this remarkable woman: her rebellious spirit, her resilient humour, the seriousness of her contemplation. "Surviving is not over," she reflects. "Surviving is every day."
Emmie Arbel: The Colour of Memory is at once a haunting portrayal of a historical atrocity; an inspiring account of a modern friendship; a beautiful work of art; and a meditation on memory itself. Because, as Barbara Yelin has put it, "The long arms of history wrap right around the present."
About the Author
Barbara Yelin was born in 1977 in Munich, and studied illustration at the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences. She became known as a comic book artist in France for Le Visiteur (The Visitor, 2004) and Le Retard (Delay, 2006). Her first publication in Germany was Gift (2010, with a text by Peer Meter), the story of a historical crime that brought her work to the attention of a wider audience. Her subsequent career has included her popular comic strip Riekes Notizen (Rieke's Notes), first printed in the daily newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau in 2011, and The Summer of Her Life (with Thomas von Steinaecker, SelfMadeHero, 2020). Her graphic novel Irmina (SelfMadeHero, 2016) received an Eisner nomination. She lives and works in Munich.
Book Information
ISBN 9781914224423
Author Barbara Yelin
Format Hardback
Page Count 192
Imprint SelfMadeHero
Publisher SelfMadeHero