Most people know Elie Wiesel ... and his books ranged from novels that question the existence of God to a journalistic expose on the plight of Soviet Jewry. Here’s the Wiesel reading list ...
In this collection, the line between fiction and nonfiction blurs to give a powerful new dimension to Wiesel's work ... This book combines selections from the writing of Elie Wiesel with paintings ...
He pointed specifically to Elie Wiesel’s “Night” as an example of a book that could be caught in the dragnet. Lochner had previously brought up “Night” during oral arguments about the ...
I do little else in my books." [4] How Elie Wiesel speaks about God is the concern of this essay. Elie Wiesel was born on Simchat Torah in 1928 and named "Eliezer" after his father's father.
Rereading Night, Elie Wiesel’s acclaimed account of his Holocaust experience, should make for a startling reawakening. Wiesel describes the horrific scene: “And as the train stopped ...