The collected stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer

Isaac Bashevis Singer, 1904-1991

Book - 1982

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FICTION/Singer, Isaac Bashevis
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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus, Giroux [1982]
Language
English
Yiddish
Main Author
Isaac Bashevis Singer, 1904-1991 (-)
Item Description
Translated from the Yiddish by Saul Bellow and others.
Physical Description
viii, 610 pages
ISBN
9780374517885
9780374126315
  • Gimpel the Fool
  • The Gentleman from Cracow Joy
  • The Little Shoemakers
  • The Unseen
  • The Spinoza of Market Street
  • The Destruction of Kreshev Taibele and her Demon Alone Yentl the Yeshiva Boy Zeidlus the Pope
  • The Last Demon Short Friday
  • The Seance
  • The Slaughterer
  • The Dead Fiddler Henne Fire
  • The Letter Writer
  • A Friend of Kafka
  • The Cafeteria
  • The Joke Powers Something Is
  • There A Crown of Feathers A Day in Coney Island
  • The Cabalist of East Broadway
  • A Quotation from Klopstock
  • A Dance and a Hop Grandfather and Grandson Old Love
  • The Admirer
  • The Yearning Heifer
  • A Tale of Two Sisters Three Encounters Passions Brother Beetle
  • The Betrayer of Israel
  • The Psychic Journey
  • The Manuscript
  • The Power of Darkness
  • The Bus A Night in the Poorhouse Escape from Civilization Vanvild Kava
  • The Reencounter Neighbors Moon and Madness
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Forty-seven stories from Singer's 100-plus canon would more appropriately be called ""Selected Stories"" than ""The Collected Stories""--but, if slightly mislabeled, this splendid gathering does indeed embrace the ever-surprising variety of Singer's steady short-story artistry over the past 30 years. Only six of the pieces here have not previously appeared in one of the eight story collections--and they are a slight group: an autobiographical fragment of young, recently-arrived Isaac in Brooklyn (material which appeared, in different form, in the Lost in America memoir); portraits of acquaintances--from literary Warsaw to Central Park West; and two lesser examples of the more mystical Singer of Krochmalna Street. The rest, however, is prime Singer indeed: old-world classics like ""Taibele and Her Demon,"" ""Yentl the Yeshiva Boy,"" or ""Gimpel the Fool"" in zesty tandem with such ironic, autobiographical incident-stories as ""The Bus."" Dybbuks on one page, taxis on the next, the prose never less than finely airy--here is certainly a grand introduction to Singer for newcomers, even if the recent collection Old Love serves something of the same purpose in far less daunting form. So, with its brief, sly yet tender introduction (the collection is dedicated to the memory of editor Rachel MacKenzie), this will draw in Singer devotees for repeat readings; and it is an essential acquisition, of course, wherever those previous collections are not available. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.