Author:Franz Werfel

'Musa Dagh stood beyond the world. No storm would reach it, even if one should break'
It is 1915 and Gabriel has returned to his childhood home, an Armenian village on the slopes of Musa Dagh. But things are becoming increasingly dangerous for his people in Turkey, and, as the government orders round-ups and deportations, the villagers of Musa Dagh decide to fight back. The seminal novel of the Armenian genocide, Franz Werfel's bestselling 1933 epic brought the catastrophe to the world's attention for the first time, and has become a talismanic story of resistance in the face of hatred.
'Forty Days will invade your senses and keep the blood pounding. Once read, it will never be forgotten' The New York Times
Translated by Geoffrey Dunlop and James Reidel
The First Lady of Alt Lit
—— VogueConsistently a pleasure to read
—— Independent on SundayA sneakily engaging and ultimately astounding first novel... A delight from the first page to the last
—— Big IssueA spare but polished miniature that isn't ashamed to strive for small truths instead of great lumbering ones
—— New York Times Book ReviewUtterly gripping, a book to be read in one sitting
—— Times Literary Supplement






