I know your street rather well.
Count Moïse de Camondo lived a few doors away from Edmund de Waal's forebears, the Ephrussi, first encountered in his bestselling memoir
The Hare with Amber Eyes. Edmund de Waal explores the lavish rooms and detailed archives and uncovers new layers to the family story.
I was deeply moved... De Waal has found a way to meditate on exile, migration and polarisation that feels painfully relevant
This is
a marvellous book, elegant, tender, loving, appreciative, disturbing, a reminder of both the fragility and resilience of high culture, indeed civilisation
De Waal is a writer of grace and restlessly enquiring intelligence, and
Letters to Camondo succeeds admirably...
Edmund de Waal's beautiful book opens a window onto an entire lost worldDe Waal's sentences like to take the historical weight of the objects he describes...
An unforgettable bookIt will make you think differently about trunks in the attic and it will make you read old letters with new eyes
Edmund de Waal is an artist whose porcelain is exhibited in museums and galleries around the world. His bestselling memoir, The Hare with Amber Eyes, won the RSL Ondaatje prize and the Costa Biography Award and in 2015 he was awarded the Windham-Campbell prize for non-fiction by Yale University. The White Road, a journey into the history of porcelain, was published in 2015. He lives in London with his family.
www.edmunddewaal.com