Related comments by Primo Levi

Primo Levi dedicated his life to bearing witness to Nazi atrocities. His concise and accessible works are a tribute to the wonders of life, proving that the human spirit cannot be defeated and that through wealth Works of meaning, morality and the ability of art to defeat death.

Regarding Levi's testimony, Tony Judt, author of "Postwar European History" and an important contemporary historian and thinker, commented: Levi's style is not only concise, but also precise. Levi's narrative is complex, sensitive, and quiet. It's often "cooler" than other people's memoirs - which is why it's more powerful than all the memoirs when it suddenly bursts into passion and sparkle with the energy of suppressed rage.

Cultural critic Mr. Xu Bi wrote a ten-thousand-word introduction to the Chinese version of "The Drowned and the Rescued". He wrote: "This is the heaviest book Levi has written, and it is beyond It is in line with his usual style. The book rarely reveals the passion that he only expresses in poetry, but the tone is still an outsider's calmness and suspicion. "Indeed, Levi's writing and his chemistry. Their identities influence each other, and he looks at the world almost from the perspective of a chemist. He uses words to ward off the enemies of memory, and his writings deliberately remain calm and focus on analysis. "I think the more objective my narrative is and avoiding being overly emotional, the more credible and useful it will be."