The Rabbi in the Attic: And Other Stories
โ Scribed by Eileen Pollack
- Book ID
- 110675502
- Publisher
- Delphinium Books
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 964 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781453255797
- ASIN
- B007TPGX32
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
"Never sentimental or simplistic, these low-key stories, written with a contemporary flair and humor, are a rich blend of moral and artistic sensibility." โKirkus Reviews
In an age of minimalists, Eileen Pollack is a writer of rare generosity. The women and men in The Rabbi in the Attic are complex, vivid people to whom something happens. Their stories take place in small towns in the Catskills, a laboratory of mutant mice in nowhere Tennessee, the backwoods of New Hampshire, the "City of Five Smells" in America's heartlandโworlds rendered with such love and intensity that the simplest objects seem magical. Many of the narrators look back on their pasts. But don't expect to be lulled by nostalgia. Expect to laugh. To be jolted. And to be moved.
Like most of us, these characters are struggling to understand what they have gained and lost by abandoning the passions and moral certainties of youth. As the narrator of the first story discovers when "barbarian" rock fans invade her town, it can be terrifying to be knocked from the "tiny fixed orbit" of conventional life. But if a person can stretch her imagination far enough, she might also be able to glimpse an "elsewhere" beyond the boundaries of ordinary human limitations.
This battle between the real and ideal is taken to mythic heights in the title novella, in which a novice rabbi must try to evict her Orthodox predecessor from the house provided by her prickly congregation. Only when she tempers her enthusiasm for the new ways with compassion for those who follow the old ways can Rabbi Bloomgarten begin to care for their souls.
Eileen Pollack writes from a Jewish point of view, but her subject is the search for principles that we must all undertake in a world in which religious truths are no longer handed down from parent to child.
Just as one of her characters decides to become a "value assessor," the author herself helps us to sort through the jumble of objects, ideas, and memories in our own attics. In doing so, she appeals to our minds and our hearts. Her characters teach us that imagination and empathy are our best hope if we are to understandโand perhaps transcendโthe pain in our world. Her language is lyrical, rhythmic, and lush. The images in her storiesโa chef's severed hand, a plummeting air conditioner, a village sunk beneath a reservoirโwill stay in your mind long after you have finished her book.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
**"For a generation of women who grew up watching _Sex and the City_ , Manhattan is the Promised Land--or as Rebecca Dana puts it in her hilarious, self-deprecating new memoir, it's 'my Jerusalem--the shining city off in the distance, the only place to go'...[An] insightful tale of two fish out of w
Friedrich Nietzsche's prescient warning about gazing long into the abyss speaks to the very nature of the human condition. Whether we care to admit it or not, it's instinctual to peer into the darkness from time to timeโto question our mortality and the fabric of our world. Stories are windows. Some