---
product_id: 47385367
title: "The Drowned and the Saved"
brand: "primo levi"
price: "₱2420"
currency: PHP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 5
url: https://www.desertcart.ph/products/47385367-the-drowned-and-the-saved
store_origin: PH
region: Philippines
---

# The Drowned and the Saved

**Brand:** primo levi
**Price:** ₱2420
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The Drowned and the Saved by primo levi
- **How much does it cost?** ₱2420 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.ph](https://www.desertcart.ph/products/47385367-the-drowned-and-the-saved)

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- primo levi enthusiasts

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## Description

The Drowned and the Saved

## Images

![The Drowned and the Saved - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61Dj9pih51L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Part of a trilogy of Holocaust survivor accounts
*by S***7 on June 3, 2025*

Levi, Weisel, and Amery are among three who survived the Nazi extermination camps. Weisel's Night is the "smoothest" literarily, and Amery (who eventually suicided) is the most trenchantly gloomy (to me). Primo Levi has piercing observations of both the victims and perpetrators, and seems to me to be thoroughly unsentimental about the hellish camps, and thus is closer to Dante's Inferno.All three are important for understanding the Holocaust.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ which is the book's great strength: the insights he draws from them and ...
*by D***B on September 1, 2015*

A truly sobering book. It is hard to read for long periods of time -- a break is needed just to clear one's head a bit before re-entering that time and place. Levi feared the lessons of the holocaust were being attenuated over time and the fact that this book is hard to get is ironic confirmation of that fear. This is the last book he wrote. The realism and specificity he includes are almost numbing, but they are not gratuitous, which is the book's great strength: the insights he draws from them and the exhortations that come from those insights are personal and persuasive. I would wish this book had wider circulation -- a hard but very valuable and emotional experience "listening" to Levi unburden his heart.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ As important as a book gets
*by L***U on August 4, 2007*

It is redundant to praise this book or describe its background, which has been done very well by other reviewers. This was Levi's final wrestling with the implications of what he called the Lager (he didn't use the term 'Holocaust'), not only as he experienced it, but more generally.Just a few points that may be less obvious. Levi never uses the phrase "survivor guilt," and his choice of terms was never without consideration. Rather, he uses the term, "shame." The chapter that goes by that name is an enormously subtle and evolving one. Levi continues to probe the feeling as he recalls it after "liberation," and there are at least five different concepts of what that "shame" entailed, no one of which did Levi think was definitive. By the way, none of Levi's definitions are the same as the popular notion of "survivor" guilt - that one feels guilty simply for having survived while others did not. The closest he comes is to talk about surviving "in place of another," which is a more complex idea. It refers specifically to the nature of the camps themselves, a horrific "laboratory," as Levi put it, in which selections, influence, luck and more did mean that one's survival always came at someone else's cost. This is a sociological point. It would not the case, for example, for the survivor of a tornado or earthquake.Second, the "grey zone" is very often misinterpreted to suggest that perpetrators and victims met in some "middle ground" somewhere. Levi is definitive about this. The responsibility of the killers and the victims are in no sense, and in no context, equivalent. But in the squalid and horrific world that was the lager, there was an enormous range of types and characters. Levi is arguing mostly against what he calls "stereotypes" - convenient simplifications.Finally, it may be of interest that "the drowned and the saved" was intended by Levi to be the title of his first book, If This is a Man (known in the U.S. as Survival in Auschwitz). His publisher disagreed, although there is a chapter in If This is a Man called Drowned and Saved. Levi's preoccupation with the role in the camp of differences in power, privilege, luck, and alliances-of-convenience runs throughout his work. It is a topic that still deserves much more attention than it has received.

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*Product available on Desertcart Philippines*
*Store origin: PH*
*Last updated: 2026-04-28*