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The Forty Days of Musa Dagh- Available November 2025

The Forty Days of Musa Dagh- Available November 2025

2025 Edition

by Franz Werfel
Translated by Geoffrey Dunlop

Regular price $28.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $28.95 USD
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Format

Product Details

Verba Mundi

Softcover
ISBN: 978-1-56792-821-1
Pages: 936
Size: 5.5" x 8.5"
Published: November 2015
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“In every sense a true and thrilling novel.”—New York Times Book Review

The heroic story of resistance during the Armenian genocide that began 100 years ago in 1915. This is the story of how the people of several Armenian villages in the mountains chose not to obey the deportation order of the Turkish government. Instead, they fortified a plateau on the slopes of Musa Dagh and repelled Turkish soldiers and military police during the summer of 1915 while holding out hope that the warships of the Allies would save them.

An international bestseller when first published in 1933, and the first novel in modern times to capture genocide by a state, Franz Werfel's masterpiece brought the world's attention to this devastating crime against humanity and the Armenian people.

Praise for The Forty Days of Musa Dagh

The Forty Days of Musa Dagh will invade your senses and keep the blood pounding. Once read, it will never be forgotten.” —New York Times

“A faithful and vivid recount of the Armenian genocide and the Musa Dagh community’s resistance. But it is more than just a story recounting that particular chapter of history. Before genocide became conceptualized by post-war academics, Werfel first captured the essences of modern state violence with his penetrating perception, and he was able to put his keen observation in the novel. Reading the book will allow readers to gain a more profound understanding of modern state violence and its nature. This timeless classic will retain its relevancy as long as the world is shadowed by the threat of genocide.” —Yale Review of International Studies

“Werfel's book ... did more than the efforts of any diplomat, journalist, or historian to encourage speech about the unspeakable. It arrives today as a timely reminder that savagery thrives in silence.” —Barnes and Noble Review

“A crackling read. Symphonic in its handling of profound themes.” —Booklist

“For Armenians, it remains unique and precious...it’s the one work whose urgency and passion keeps the truth of their genocide before the eyes of a world that would prefer to forget about it. For Jewish readers, Werfel’s epic about the choice between submitting to the killers or dying on the barricade is still poignant. In several ghettos where the Nazis held Jewish populations before murdering them, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh was passed from hand to hand and became the inspiration—almost the manual—for the sacrificial ghetto risings that followed. Werfel wins an argument with the world’s indifference—and wins it crushingly.” London Review of Books

“In every sense a true and thrilling novel....It tells a story which it is almost one’s duty as an intelligent human being to read. And one’s duty here becomes one's pleasure also.” New York Times Book Review

“Werfel expresses his unequivocal admonishment on the subject of genocide through a wise and beneficent character, the Muslim sage Agha Rifaat Bereket who is the first to warn of the atrocities....As the demonic impulse to genocide captivated Werfel’s own countrymen, he wrote with an uncanny, intuitive premonition enough to chill the bones of readers for all time. To end with Werfel’s immortal words: ‘The most horrible thing that had been done was, not that a whole people had been exterminated, but that a whole people, God’s children, had been dehumanised.’” Bosphorus Review of Books

Franz Werfel
Franz Werfel was born in Prague to a well-off Jewish family. As a young man, he was involved with the burgeoning community of writers who frequented Prague's Cafe Arco, including Max Brod and Franz Kafka. He published his first book of poems at the age of twenty-one and began working as an editor for Kurt Wolff's publishing firm the following year. Werfel's talents as a writer and editor allowed him to avoid the frontline in World War I in favor of the Military Press Bureau, where he worked as a propagandist alongside other notable writers. The connections he made during this time allowed him to become one of Austria's most renowned writers by the end of the 1920s. In the 1930s, however, the humanist, anti-genocide stance he expressed in works such as The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, as well as his Jewish heritage, attracted the censure of the Nazis. His books were among the many that were burned among accusations of conspiracy and decadence. In 1940, Werfel fled to the United States via France and Spain and settled in Los Angeles. There, he wrote his final play, Jacobowsky and the Colonel. He died in Los Angeles five years later.

Geoffrey Dunlop