Arne Brun Lie

Arne Brun Lie (February 2, 1925 – April 11, 2010)[1] was a Norwegian-American author and Holocaust survivor, best known for the book Night and Fog: A Survivor's Story (1990).

Born in Oslo, Norway, Lie was a member of the Norwegian Resistance during the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. He was captured by the Gestapo in 1943 for resistance activity at sixteen years of age. He spent a year in Nazi concentration camps, including Natzweiler-Struthof and Dachau. He was released in 1944.[2]

Following his release, Lie moved back to Norway. He immigrated to the United States in the early 1980s, and since then became public about his Holocaust experience, publishing a book and releasing a documentary film.[3] Lie moved to Ipswich, MA in 1989. He was the brother of Sylvei Brun Lie, who is the wife of the famous Norwegian lawyer, judge and politician Jens Evensen.

Arne Brun Lie died on 11 April 2010 in Beverly, MA. He was 85 years old.

Selected works

  • Night and Fog (with Robby Robinson, W.W. Norton & Co. 1990)
  • Passage (The New Film Company, Inc.: 1991)
  • From the Camps to the Kitchen (forthcoming book)
gollark: The somewhat new GPT-3 thing can even add four-digit numbers, despite being trained as a text generation thing on vast volumes of internet content originally.
gollark: Machine learning stuff is getting impressively good at some tasks.
gollark: What about? The masks thing?
gollark: I mean, at one point he said something along the lines of "test less so our case numbers are lower".
gollark: Trump really seems to actively be trying to make the US's situation *worse*.

References

  1. "Arne Brun Lie". tributes.com. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  2. Johnny Hopper, and his war against the Germans (Robert Wernick. Smithsonian Magazine, October 1993)
  3. Night And Fog. by Arne Brun Lie with Robby Robinson(New York Times. March 18, 1990)
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