Typex captures lengthy sequences on a single page. His characteristic page layout is the perfect format for the story: he has his characters walk down the page from top to bottom, with the speech bubbles making up a monologue, as in the work of cartoonists such as Brecht Evens and Cyril Pedrosa. With Typex’s trademark flair and humour, he chooses those moments from Mendelssohn’s life that he considers most apposite. For example, we learn that Moishe never actually met the writer and philosopher Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, even though there is a famous painting that depicts their encounter. It’s fascinating to discover that the history books are wrong more often than not. These anecdotes are about moments in time, such as Mendelssohn’s departure for Berlin, his declaration of love to his wife Fromet and his encounter with the antisemitic King Frederick the Great.Įvery chapter has a clear introduction, with the official historical account on the left and the reconstruction of that story on the right. In six chapters – or ‘anecdotes,’ as the subtitle calls them – the reader witnesses a number of important milestones from the life of the short, hunchbacked worrywart.
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