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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Winfrey selects Wiesel’s ‘Night’ novel/memoir

Anna Johnson Associated Press

In her first book club pick since allegations that some parts of her last selection were fabricated, Oprah Winfrey has selected Elie Wiesel’s “Night” – a classic of Holocaust literature sometimes labeled a novel but regarded by the author as a memoir.

The 77-year-old Wiesel, who wrote “Night” in the 1950s, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 for a lifetime of writing and speaking against hatred, racism and genocide.

“Night” is Wiesel’s chronicle of his family’s placement in the Auschwitz death camp and was his first of more than 40 books, essays and plays.

An accomplished work of prose, the book has often been called a novel, including by the study guide CliffsNotes. But Wiesel’s foundation labels it a memoir, as does the book’s publisher, Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

The book club on Winfrey’s popular television show has meant huge sales for selected titles. By Monday night, a paperback edition of “Night” was No. 1 on Amazon.com, displacing Winfrey’s controversial previous pick, “A Million Little Pieces” by James Frey.

Frey’s memoir of substance abuse has drawn criticism amid allegations that the author fabricated some parts, including a three-month prison stint that apparently never happened.

He has acknowledged some alterations but defended the “essential truth” of the book as a story of addiction.

Winfrey reaffirmed her support of Frey’s book last week when she phoned in to “Larry King Live” at the end of an hourlong interview with Frey and dismissed questions about the book as “much ado about nothing.”

Winfrey did not mention Frey’s book in announcing her selection of “Night” on Monday’s show. Instead, she referred to the King Day holiday.

“Like Dr. King, I have a dream of my own, too, that the powerful message of this little book would be engraved on every human heart and will never be forgotten again,” she said. “That you who read this book will feel as I do that these 120 pages … should be required reading for all humanity.”

Winfrey also said she plans to travel with Wiesel to Auschwitz next month, and her show will have a high school essay contest on Wiesel’s book. Fifty winners will be flown to Chicago, where her show is based, for a taping with the author.