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David Golder
 
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David Golder [IMPORT] (Paperback)

~ Irene Nemirovsky (Author), Sandra Smith (Translator) (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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  Hardcover, Import -- -- $4.27
  Paperback $24.95 $24.95 --
  Paperback, Import, March 6, 2007 -- $13.50 $5.32
  Unknown Binding -- -- $210.00

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Editorial Reviews

Review

David Golder, the brief account of a Jewish migrant's last and troubled days, was published in 1929. Anecdotal, it dwells on incidental encounters and reflections: conversations with his predatory, adulterous wife, her longtime lover, his fickle, pleasure-loving daughter, a business partner; a tour of the Jewish quarter with an old mate; a trip to his origins which, in a style reminiscent of the mature Némirovsky, ends in a moving portrayal of a final, unrecognised friendship and the picture of another hapless migrant's voyage.

The novel opens in the manner of a thriller, with a suicide offstage. At times it reads like a film script, at others it employs a collagist technique: fragments of satire and gossip, discussions of big business, streams of consciousness which are a confluence of past and present. Its pace is swift, its atmosphere claustrophobic. Though it occasionally shifts perspective from Golder's monologues to a camera's eye view of his wife and daughter and their affairs, its relentless focus is on the revelation of his inner demons.

David, ruthless, venal and ultimately pitiable, dominates the book; its other characters are at best projections of his needs, fears and desires. Possibly the shortcomings of a writer as yet immature, they also bear witness to her unsentimental understanding of the scars of emotional and physical dispossession.

Superficially, David's character bears more than a passing resemblance to that of Daphne du Maurier's monstrous Julius Levi in The Progress of Julius. Both Golder and Levi are Jewish migrants who have fought their way out of adversity; both, paranoid and vulnerable, are obsessed with beautiful, flighty daughters, but with very different outcomes. It's tempting to imagine du Maurier, a frequent visitor to France, reading Némirovsky on holiday and unconsciously appropriating some elements of her work.

Du Maurier's Julius remains a parodic representation of a Jewish parvenu. Némirovsky, however, writing closer to her own preoccupations, strips away Golder's mask, flesh and skin, to reveal the skull of a man damaged by history, prejudice and the failure of love.

In much of her work, Némirovsky's view of the roots her family outgrew is at best cold-eyed and at worst disdainful. It is also self-revealing, and a testament to her refusal to discard any part of her heritage. Francophone, exiled and reassimilated, she continued, in her fiction, to return to the collective past. In this early novel are flashes of the piercin --The Independent --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.


Review

Praise for the first edition of David Golder:
"The work of a woman who has the strength of one of the masters like Balzac or Dostoyevsky"
New York Times, 1930

"All Némirovsky’s talent is apparent in her first novel: her pitiless gaze and her generous heart … Suite Française may take the crown, but her other works confirm that she was not simply the chronicler of June 1940, but a writer with a very broad canvas who has finally found her place in the history of literature."
Lire

"A novelist of the very first order, perceptive to a fault and sly in her emotional restraint."
Evening Standard

Product Details

  • Paperback: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada (March 6, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0676979459
  • ISBN-13: 978-0676979459
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #733,630 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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34 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Anything for money., January 25, 2007
I think I read a much older translation of David Golder. I have a feeling the latest translation is better. This book is not easy to find, as are other Nemirovsky translations.

The world we see in this novel is one of money. Although it does bring some initial happiness to poor Golder, it ends up ruining his whole life, his marriage, his businesses, and his relationship to his one and only daughter, Joyce. She loves him only for his money of course, as does Gloria, his wife.

It's easy to see real-life parallels of David Golder in our present world - the upper middle-class, celebrity worship, and the general culture. Highly recommended.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Unabashed greed, November 6, 2007
This is a very short but staggeringly powerful book which made me gasp with its admission of sheer unadulterated greed. David Golder was a Russian immigrant who rose to a place in the financial pages of the world's oil business. He was ruthless, ambitious and completely amoral, married to a grasping woman and father to a spoilt daughter who loved her father only for the money he gave her. It is a desolate read without any love or redeeming features in its characters who worship only money and the privileges it brings. I couldn't feel any sympathy for him, even on his deathbed, so I'm glad that it was such a quick read as it made me feel too depressed with its bleakness and the pervading sense of hopelessness.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant debut by Nemirovsky, December 25, 2007
By Andres C. Salama (Buenos Aires, Argentina) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Irene Nemirovsky's brilliant first book (originally published in France in 1929) deals with the eponymous businessman, a ruthless man in his late sixties who has amassed an enormous fortune, but who increasingly faces a brutal reversal of chance. Hated by his wife and daughter (who only expect money from him), with a heart condition that augurs him just a few months of life, his business deals collapsing, he looks at his life and sees that he has never loved anyone, except a daughter that may not be really his. Reportedly autobiographical (Nemirovsky was the estranged daughter of an exiled Russian Jewish banker; she could be the inspiration for Golder's daughter Joyce), what is a bit disturbing about the book is how Golder's greed and the materialism of his wife and daughter are seen as an exclusively Jewish trait; in a post-Holocaust world, this gives the book a strange feeling as if it was written by a very talented antisemite (paradoxically, Nemirovsky died in Auschwitz).
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5.0 out of 5 stars The world lost a lot of creative minds in Auschwitz - Irene Nemirowsky was one
If Suite Francaise was known more for its chequered 64-year journey of as a manuscript seeking a publisher, David Golder is the book that launched Nemirowsky's career and is a... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Shane K. Joseph

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