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Loading... For the Relief of Unbearable Urges: Storiesby Nathan Englander
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Englander focuses much of his attention on developing complex characters that require scrutiny from readers. One of the best things about this collection is that a reader can come in and do one or two of the stories and leave satisfied; yet, for the more serious reader, second and third reads of the entire collection yield new discoveries, making this book great for light readers as well as lovers of literature. ( )Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. I read this book a second time for the my book group. I thought I had liked it better the first time I read it. It is obvious that the writing is good, but I did not really care for most of the stories. Englander's characters are not well-enough developed for me to be really interested in them. Both he and Shalom Aulander have left Orthodox Judaism, and I definitely prefer Englander's take on the rituals and lifestyle. These stories aren't light reading, but they're incredibly engaging if you can take the time to sit and enjoy them. This is by far the most original short story collection I've read in some time, and at the same time, his characters, themes, and style bring it together to be also one of the most cohesive collections I've read since O'Connor's A Good Man is Hard to Find. It comes highly recommended, particularly if you're a fan of fiction that integrates religion in interesting and/or surprising ways, or if you're a fan of Calvino, Marquez, or other authors who'll force you to think if you want the full impact of a story. This is a fine debut collection of short stories by Englander--mostly centering around Jewish themes and set mostly in the United States though in the final story 'In this way we are wise' in Israel. Some of Englander's characters are a bit more religious than others and this seems to be of particular interest to the author--the diverse meaning of what it can mean to be Jewish. The stories here are well plotted and written with an objective eye and a sly sense of humor. They flow easily to the eye and can at times 'Reb Kringle' or 'The wig' be quite hilarious. Although I haven't read all that much of Isaac Singer's work the comparison made of Englander by some to him does not seem far fetched to me. He is an excellent and a very interesting writer and it's too bad that he makes us wait so long from this debut work in 1999 until 2007 for his first novel. Hopefully he can hurry up his creative gestation period because this writer is seriously worth watching. 0.068 seconds to build listing
Amazon.com (ISBN 0375404929, Hardcover)For the Relief of Unbearable Urges is an astonishment. Whether Nathan Englander is creating the last days of 27 condemned Soviet writers or the first in which a Park Avenue lawyer finds religion (in a taxi, no less), his gift is everywhere in evidence. Englander's specialty is the collision of Jewish law and tradition with secular realities, whether in Brooklyn, Tel Aviv, or Stalinist Russia. In one tale, a wigmaker from an ultra-orthodox Brooklyn enclave journeys into Manhattan for supplies and, more importantly, inspiration--frequenting a newsstand where she pays for the right to flip through forbidden fashion magazines. If all Ruchama wants to do is be beautiful again and momentarily free of communal constraints, others ask only to survive. In "The Tumblers," set in World War II Poland (with a metafictional twist), followers of the Mahmir Rebbe get into a train filled with circus performers rather than into a cattle car. Their only chance is to camouflage themselves as part of the troupe:Their acceptance as acrobats was a stretch, a first-glance guess, a benefit of the doubt granted by circumstance and only as valuable as their debut would prove. It was an absurd undertaking. But then again, Mendel thought, no more unbelievable than the reality from which they'd escaped, no more unfathomable than the magic of disappearing Jews.Another story, "Reb Kringle," is almost breezy by comparison. Each year, one Brooklynite dreads his holiday job from hell, playing Santa Claus in a Manhattan department store: "There were elves posted on each side of Itzik; one--a humorless, muscular midget--wore a pair of combat boots that gave him the look of elf-at-arms. His companion might have been a twin. He wore black high-tops but had the same vigilant paramilitary demeanor." Itzik can put up with the children's accidents and greed, with his sciatica, and even with a mischief maker's attempt to cut off his beard. But when one boy admits that what he really wants to do is celebrate Hanukkah, "the infamous Reb Santa" loses it. Though this is undoubtedly the collection's lightest piece--proof positive that you have to be a saint to be a Jewish Santa--it is no less piercing an examination of identity and obligation than Englander's more heavyweight entries. --Kerry Fried (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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