Everyday Jews Scenes from a Vanished Life Yehoshue Perle, David G. Roskies, Maier Deshell, Margaret Birstein

Series:
New Yiddish Library
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
02 Nov 2007
ISBN:
9780300116373
Dimensions:
432 pages: 210 x 140 x 30mm

Categories:

When "Everyday Jews" was first published in Poland in 1935, the Jewish Left was scandalized by the sex scenes, and I. B. Singer complained that the novel was too bleak to be psychologically credible. Yet within two years Perle's novel was heralded as a modern Yiddish masterpiece. Offering a unique blend of raw sexuality and romantic love, thwarted desire and spiritual longing, "Everyday Jews" is now considered Perle's consummate achievement. The voice of Mendl, the novel's 12-year-old narrator, is precisely captured by this artfully simple translation. Mendl's impoverished and dysfunctional family struggles to survive in a nameless Polish provincial town. In his unsettled world, most ordinary people yearn to be somewhere or someone else. As Mendl journeys to adulthood, Perle captures the complex interplay of Christians and Jews, weekdays and Sabbaths, town and country, dream and reality, against a relentless and never-ending battle of the sexes.

Yehoshue Perle (1888-1943) was one of Poland's most popular, controversial, and prolific Yiddish novelists of the interwar and wartime period. In his introduction to the novel, David G. Roskies, Sol & Evelyn Henkind Professor of Yiddish Literature at the Jewish Theological Seminary, opens up Perle's tragic life and undiscovered oeuvre to a new generation of readers.

"I was enthralled by Perle's "Everyday Jews." It shows the tension between Eros and Thanatos in a Polish town in a way that combines the phantasmagorical work of Bruno Schulz with the ethnological reportage of S. Ansky. An extraordinarily document, written in a vivid style, the blunt, animated reaction it awakened is not unlike the prudishness that greeted D.H. Lawrence's "Women in Love" when it first came out"." And to think that even Isaac Bashevis Singer blushed."--Ilan Stavans
--Ilan Stavans