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The Illuminated Soul [Hardcover]

Aryeh Lev Stollman (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 14, 2002
Eva Laquedem, a scientist who has fled Prague at the outbreak of World War II, settled briefly in Japan, and then traveled rootlessly like the legendary Wandering Jew, arrives, by accident, in Windsor, Canada, at the home of a devout widow and her two sons. Within her purse she carries the renowned Augsburg Miscellany, a magnificent fifteenth-century illuminated Hebrew manuscript, for which she has risked her life. Eva's physical beauty, the dazzling tales she tells, and, above all, the magnificent Augsburg Miscellany powerfully affect Adele and her sons, giving them a new experience of the world and its possibilities.

Aryeh Lev Stollman's first book, The Far Euphrates, was hailed as "radiant" and "remarkable" by The New York Times Book Review; New York Newsday described it as "kin to the fiction of the late, great Bernard Malamud"; and The Forward declared that the novel "lifts the level of recent American-Jewish writing to a new plane." Now, in his long-awaited second novel, he illuminates the themes he touched on in The Far Euphrates and once again magically expands our sense of the everyday and the limits of our imaginations.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Stollman's second novel, after his lauded debut, The Far Euphrates, is another thoughtful, resonant examination of Jewish life in the aftermath of the Holocaust. Now a famous neuroanatomist, Dr. Joseph Ivri reflects on his life and career. Raised in a devout Jewish household in placid, post-WWII Ontario, Joseph is obsessively studious, somber and a bit of a religious prodigy. Several painful events have contributed to his serious view of the world: his father's illness and death, the institutionalization of his best friend and the diminishing eyesight of his younger brother, Asa. A welcome addition to the household when Joseph is 14 is boarder Eva Laquedem Higashi, a beautiful, sagelike refugee from Prague via Shanghai, who is the very embodiment of the dislocated life many European Jews faced even after the Allies' victory. Eva brings with her a most precious possession: a rare 15th-century Hebrew manuscript, the Augsburg Miscellany, smuggled out of Europe at great risk and at tragic cost. The manuscript's implications prove a suspenseful factor, as its history is gradually revealed. While the book's leisurely pace and religious allusions may limit its audience, discerning readers will be intrigued by its quiet mysticism. Stollman's measured prose harbors its share of idiosyncratic nuggets, including liberal doses of Japanese folklore and an appearance by Hannah Arendt. Yet the narrative gains cohesion from Joseph's encompassing intelligence, and his world both provincial and worldly is evoked with delicate accuracy. A practicing neuroradiologist, Stollman illuminates the mysteries of life with the clear eye of a scientist and the faith of a believer. Rights sold in Germany, Italy and the Netherlands.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

In this rich effort, Stollman returns to the setting of his first novel, The Far Euphrates. Another Jewish family, this time the Ivris (a widowed mother and her two sons, teenaged Joseph and ten-year-old Asa), lives an unremarkable life in Windsor, Ontario, in the late 1940s. Things change, however, when a stranger rents a room from the Ivris. The drifter, Eva Laquedem, fled Prague at the outbreak of World War II and has been on the move ever since. She has in her possession an illuminated 15th-century Hebrew manuscript known as the Augsburg Miscellany, which her family has owned for centuries and for which she has risked her life, having smuggled it out of Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. Narrated by the adult Joseph, now an accomplished neuroanatomist, the story depicts Eva as a beautiful muse who left as suddenly as she came. The richness of Torah study, the ancient languages of the Near East, and the opening up of one's soul are some of the gifts that the mysterious boarder bestows on the Ivris and the reader. Stollman's first novel was an American Library Association Notable Book, and this tale of people searching for family values is sure to have similar success. Highly recommended for all libraries and for teen readers as well. Molly Abramowitz, Silver Spring, MD

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover; First Edition edition (February 14, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573222011
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573222013
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,988,494 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dreamscape, September 23, 2002
By 
This review is from: The Illuminated Soul (Hardcover)
Stollman creates a marvelous work of fiction in "The Illuminated Soul." His characters are so real that they acquire a life of their own. Joseph, through whose eyes we see the story, is a noted scientist in the field of neuroanatomy who has written a book called "The Illuminated Soul." Thus, we have a book within a book. His brother Asa, is blind. Both men are unmarried and take care of each other. For them as for the story, the past overshadows the present. Their mother Adele was an earthy woman who supported her sons as a kosher caterer. Their lives are forever changed by a vistor, the luminous Eva Higashi. It is through the power of these characters that the story affects us.

Stollman's prose is among some of the most lyrical and affecting. His concluding paragraph is stunning, "For a short while, a long time ago, we were like those celestial beings, arrayed in the higher realms, looking out over the heavens, and we saw so much farther than we had ever imagined." He writes from the transforming magic love exerts.

The historical detail makes us believe that Stollman is an antiquarian of the highest order. The devotional aspects of the Jewish Apocrypha give us a real feel of this community in Canada. Stollman is masterful in this sense.

The story somewhat falls apart for me with the ending. Trying not to give the ending away, we are asked to believe that Joseph was able to execute the story's final act without his mother intervening, Eva discovering this prior to her departure or returning to rectify it, or his brother discovering and making some intervention. Perhaps I'm a bit too logical for the conclusion of this wonderful dreamscape. Unfortunately, the ending is the only false note in an otherwise exquisite novel! Even so, there are so many strengths here, that it is a great and pleasurable reading experience, one not to be missed.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Personal Transformation, May 14, 2002
By 
Jon Linden (Warren, N.J. United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Illuminated Soul (Hardcover)
In "The Illuminated Soul" Stollman clearly illustrates how each and every thing that a person encounters changes them forever. Through the eyes, ears and voice of the protagonist the book portrays a sense of relatedness of all things and people in the world. And, yet, at the same time, portrays the difficulty of life's vicissitudes. But throughout, the book shows the reader, that each person can truly make a difference to others in this world. By starkly illustrating how one person's enlightened presence can have a profound effect on those around them, the reader soon realizes that Stollman does more than just tell a story. He scratches off the surface, and reaches deeply into the thoughts and feelings of young Joseph, as he develops an insight and depth of feeling for a person, that he has only known for a very short time. Yet this brief acquaintance changed Joseph and his character for the rest of his life.

Stylistically, Stollman presents a rather wondrous mix of temporal wanderings. The story switches from the present life, to the past life of Joseph. The alternation between the two time frames within his life, further enhances the reader's ability to draw these conclusions and to clearly envision how this brief encounter with one other person, who has a depth of feeling and understanding far surpassing the average human being, can make an indelible impression on the thought patterns of others. Using a style that is easy to read, yet highly thought provoking, Stollman achieves a synergy between the mundane day-to-day world and the ephemeral spirituality that exists within each person. Contained within this synergy is a new way of thinking, which in turn leads to a new way of life. It enhances the ability of people to perceive the inner feelings of not only oneself, but also of others. If the reader follows Stollman's portrayal of this transformative experience, one can learn and understand not only ones own inner feelings, but in addition, one can increase their sensitivity to the feelings and presence of people and things that exist all around us.

Finally, the story elucidates how just one act by a person, can change the entire direction of that person's future. This change can be both positive and negative simultaneously. Yet, through this act, an individual can redirect the entire activities of one's life with respect to the act. In Stollman's own words, "Anything you have ever seen or heard or held in your hand changes you forever. When we encounter each other, we become part of each other." Once done, this process cannot be undone. The book is highly recommended for anyone seeking further inner understanding and peace. Through the book one can learn how a soul can be truly illuminated and revealed by the manner in which one approaches life and acts. It allows the reader to truly empathize with one's inner self and thus, increase self-understanding many fold.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Illuminating subject, March 5, 2002
This review is from: The Illuminated Soul (Hardcover)
This new novel, much like Stollman's first novel, The Far Euphrates, tells the story of a religious Jewish family in quiet Windsor, Ontario, Canada post World Ward II, who become involved in a spiritual quest that intersects with the aftermath and implications of the Holocaust. However, The Illuminated Soul is written much more as a fable. A beautiful young woman, Eva Laquedem, a refugee from Prague, comes to live with the Ivri family under unusual circumstances. She imbues them with fanciful tales, while bearing a valuable Jewish text that belongs to her father, Enoch Laquedem, a Jewish scholar. The work is called the Augsberg Miscellany and consists of all the ancient holy books plus the commentary of its originator, one Alexander Augsberg, plus scholarly writings by Enoch. Enoch's guiding theme is that the age of the prophets is over and that prophecy will only continue now through the "illumination" of the ancient texts. His own contribution begins with a mystical interpretation of the "pillar of cloud" that descended over the Ark and the Children of Israel as they wandered in the desert.

Beyond the over arching spiritual theme are the human stories. There is Joseph, the narrator, now an old man, a famous scientist and author of a book of mysticism, looking back to his childhood, his dreams and regrets. We meet his younger self, his widowed mother, his younger brother who is slowly going blind, and see Joseph's unspoken love for Eva. Then there is Eva herself, her wandering around the globe, sort of like a metaphor of the Biblical wandering, her determination to complete her father's work, her secrets and her private torments.

Stollman is fascinated in, although he does not specifically say, in an almost Kabbalistic fashion in the hidden meanings of the Torah as well as deciphering the text and the language for the pure joy of it. However, he does not hesitate to also tie in the literature or fables of other cultures, such as Tales of the Genji and stories that Eva invents. Although I appreciate the attempt, for me the novel never succeeds in tying all the elements together and making the connections. Nevertheless, I would recommend this short novel because of the worthy subject matter and the questions it raises.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I AM AN EXPERT ON BRAINS. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Iris May, Augsburg Miscellany, Professor Hirschmann, Enoch Laquedem, Rabbi Kremlach, Isabel Kremlach, Eva Higashi, Jewish Museum, Alexander of Augsburg, Evening Faces, Statler Hotel, King Solomon, Chujo Higashi, Clouds of Glory, Miss Laquedem, Pillar of Cloud, Assumption College, Children of Israel, Detroit River, Hradcany Castle, United States, L'ou'a L'ou'a, Biblische Monatsschrift, Jewel of the Seas, Monsieur Charcot
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