About the Author
Primo Levi was born to well-educated Jewish parents in 1919. A small, shy child and the only Jew in his school, Levi was often bullied by his classmates, but he excelled academically. As a teenager, Levi joined Italy’s Fascist youth movement, as was expected of all young men. He studied chemistry at Turin University, but the the 1938 Italian Racial Laws (which encouraged heavy discrimination against ethnic Jews) made it difficult for him to find a supervisor for his thesis as well as his first job. After the Fascist leader Mussolini was deposed by his own government in 1943, German forces occupied northern and central Italy, established Mussolini as a puppet governor, and increased the persecution of Jewish people. Levi and several of his friends fled to the Alps and formed a small anti-Fascist coalition, but they were arrested by the Fascist militia later that year, who turned them over to the SS. He was taken from Italy to Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. The year that Levi spent in the concentration camp is described in Survival in Auschwitz. One of Auschwitz’s few survivors, Levi returned home to Turin, Italy in 1945, where he soon met his future wife Lucia and began working as a chemist. Levi began writing his recollection of Auschwitz in 1946, finishing the Italian manuscript by the end of the year with Lucia’s help. He continued working as a chemist and would not publish another book for 16 years, by which time he was married and had two children. In 1963, Levi published The Truce, an account of journey home from Poland to Italy, and won an Italian literature award, the success of which grew the audience of his first memoir as well. Levi began writing more prolifically, authoring two more memoirs, one novel, several volumes of short stories, and a collection of poetry. However, the same year that The Truce was published, Levi began to suffer serious depression, apparently brought on by the trauma of Auschwitz he experienced decades before. Levi retired from chemistry in 1977 to write full-time, establishing himself as a respected figure of Italian literature. Levi died in 1987, having fallen from a three-story balcony. The presiding coroner determined it was a suicide and multiple biographers agree, though several of Levi’s close friends dispute this claim. When Levi died, Elie Wiesel, another Holocaust survivor and author stated, “Primo Levi died at Auschwitz forty years later.”