| "Ms. Filloux does not discount Lemkin's efforts, but she also makes grimly clear that good intentions mean nothing in the face of killers who revel in unrestrained savagery and have no reason to fear retaliation. Lemkin's House is rarely preachy, but it is a call to action nonetheless." |
--Neil Genzlinger, The New York Times
| | "'The truth is people could care less.' Catherine Filloux, author of Lemkin's House, nails what's behind millennia of inertia in the face of devastation in those seven words. Lemkin's House is about one man who did care -- the Polish American lawyer Raphael Lemkin, the man who invented the word "genocide" ... and the sadly meager (but still hugely important) legacy that he left behind." |
--Martin Denton, nytheatre.com
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