Pearl Abraham
Author of The Romance Reader
About the Author
Pearl Abraham has taught at the MFA Writing Program at Sarah Lawrence College, at the University of Houston, and at New York University.
Image credit: photographer: Tim Schultheis
Works by Pearl Abraham
De verloving 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Abraham, Pearl
- Legal name
- Abraham, Pearl
- Birthdate
- 1960
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Hunter College
New York University - Awards and honors
- Koret Award finalist (Fiction, 2006) for The Seventh Beggar
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Jerusalem, Israel
- Places of residence
- Jerusalem, Israel
New York, New York, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
In Giving Up America Pearl Abraham has produced a novel about a Jewish American couple living in New York. While re-modeling their new house, the tedious work is tiring and their individual styles clash. Daniel, a perfectionist, is often generally critical of Deena as well as her work as copy editor.
After 7 years, their marriage is flagging. While Daniel has been financially prudent, he now seems to need and want more fun in his life. He buys bikes for them, pays for dance and ski lessons. show more And befriends Jill a young, single co-worker and her married friend Ann.
Deena wants to continue working on their home but Daniel spends more and more time phoning and hanging out with Jill. Deena's reaction is odd... until it is too late.
I like Abraham's characterization of Deena and other female characters as mostly strong, moral and active. Daniel comes across as churlish, weak and hypocritical.
The idea of dating couples taking dance lessons as a test of compatibility is smart.
On page 114, Abraham is spot on describing a dance session between Daniel and an angry Deena attend, with the words: "They stood facing each other, waiting for the music to start, and Daniel smiled. Deena swallowed and forced something down. This is what its like for women who stay. They don't say anything. They absorb and swallow and soon there is nothing left to say. But they hate, how they hate.And still they stay."
Very good read. show less
After 7 years, their marriage is flagging. While Daniel has been financially prudent, he now seems to need and want more fun in his life. He buys bikes for them, pays for dance and ski lessons. show more And befriends Jill a young, single co-worker and her married friend Ann.
Deena wants to continue working on their home but Daniel spends more and more time phoning and hanging out with Jill. Deena's reaction is odd... until it is too late.
I like Abraham's characterization of Deena and other female characters as mostly strong, moral and active. Daniel comes across as churlish, weak and hypocritical.
The idea of dating couples taking dance lessons as a test of compatibility is smart.
On page 114, Abraham is spot on describing a dance session between Daniel and an angry Deena attend, with the words: "They stood facing each other, waiting for the music to start, and Daniel smiled. Deena swallowed and forced something down. This is what its like for women who stay. They don't say anything. They absorb and swallow and soon there is nothing left to say. But they hate, how they hate.And still they stay."
Very good read. show less
This novel tells of Rachel, a teenager and the oldest child of a Chasidic family in upstate New York. Thwarted by the restrictive culture of ultra-Orthodox Judaism, she pines for more freedom in her life.
Light and easy to read, The Romance Reader peeps into the fascinating culture of Chasidic Judaism. I especially loved reading about how Rachel handled the situation in which she was forced to meet the young man selected by the matchmaker to be her future husband. Though very well written, I show more felt it ended too abruptly. I wanted to read much more about Rachel's life. I do hope that Ms. Abraham continues to write stories which share this very special culture with the world. show less
Light and easy to read, The Romance Reader peeps into the fascinating culture of Chasidic Judaism. I especially loved reading about how Rachel handled the situation in which she was forced to meet the young man selected by the matchmaker to be her future husband. Though very well written, I show more felt it ended too abruptly. I wanted to read much more about Rachel's life. I do hope that Ms. Abraham continues to write stories which share this very special culture with the world. show less
A story of the unheard world of Hassidic Judaism. I knew almost nothing about it before reading this, and I'm still in awe of some of the strange rituals and rules of the religion. The story telling is apt, but the real joy in this novel is the eye-opening world of ultra-conservative Judaisim
A thought provoking story. In American Taliban we follow the journey of John Jude Parish an 18 year old American surfer, skater and philosophy student from the Outer Banks of North Carolina as he develops a fascination with the Arabic language and culture, and the philosophy of Islam. A year later he's in a Taliban training camp in Pakistan, where his journey of self discovery intersects with the hard reality of a post 9/11world.
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Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 1,140
- Popularity
- #22,523
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 31
- ISBNs
- 51
- Languages
- 5
- Favorited
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