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What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank: Stories Gebundene Ausgabe – Rauer Buchschnitt, 7. Februar 2012
Kaufoptionen und Plus-Produkte
The title story, inspired by Raymond Carver’s masterpiece, is a provocative portrait of two marriages in which the Holocaust is played out as a devastating parlor game. In the outlandishly dark “Camp Sundown” vigilante justice is undertaken by a group of geriatric campers in a bucolic summer enclave. “Free Fruit for Young Widows” is a small, sharp study in evil, lovingly told by a father to a son. “Sister Hills” chronicles the history of Israel’s settlements from the eve of the Yom Kippur War through the present, a political fable constructed around the tale of two mothers who strike a terrible bargain to save a child. Marking a return to two of Englander’s classic themes, “Peep Show” and “How We Avenged the Blums” wrestle with sexual longing and ingenuity in the face of adversity and peril. And “Everything I Know About My Family on My Mother’s Side” is suffused with an intimacy and tenderness that break new ground for a writer who seems constantly to be expanding the parameters of what he can achieve in the short form.
Beautiful and courageous, funny and achingly sad, Englander’s work is a revelation.
- Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe224 Seiten
- SpracheEnglisch
- HerausgeberKnopf
- Erscheinungstermin7. Februar 2012
- Abmessungen15.04 x 2.39 x 24.28 cm
- ISBN-100307958701
- ISBN-13978-0307958709
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Bewertet in den USA am20. Mai 2012There's a blurb on the back of this book from the great Richard Russo that really captures what makes this collection so special: "Nathan Englander is one of the rare writers, who like Faulkner, manages to make his seemingly obsessive, insular concerns all the more universal for their specificity." Englander's characters are all Jewish, struggling with antisemitism, memories of the Holocaust and the pull between religion and the secular world. As someone raised Catholic, I may not get all the Hebrew and Yiddish words that pepper some of these stories, but I found every one of the stories riveting. Englander is one of those amazing writers that you just sit back comfortably to read, knowing that with every turned page he's going to delight and amaze you. The other startling things about this collection is the range - he takes you from the silly revenge fantasies of a pack of teenage boys to the gripping reality of a violent, soul-deadened man whose ability to empathize was killed off by the horrors he lived through in a concentration camp. I highly recommend this collection to anyone.
The eight stories in the collection are:
1. What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank -- 30 pp - An Orthodox couple living in Israel visits another secular couple living in Florida so the two wives, who were childhood friends in Brooklyn, can reunite. The story, told from the secular husband's perspective, starts off with a very funny take on the man's annoyance at his Israeli's counterpart's constant attempts to prove he and his wife are living a more Jewish life than their American friends. But when the couples play the "Anne Frank game" to determine who they could depend on to save them if they needed to be hidden in a secret place, the Orthodox wife comes to a startling realization about her husband.
2. Sister Hills - 39 pp - A great story about two women from families who founded a small Jewish settlement near the Palestinian border that grew to a bustling city. One woman loses her husband and three sons to various wars and accidents, and when she is left without family, she expects her neighbor to honor a contract they made when the other woman's daughter was an infant and feverish. Hoping she could trick the angel of death, the other woman "sold" her daughter to her neighbor, for a minimal amount and then continued to raise her, never thinking the other woman would ever really consider the daughter hers.
3. How We Avenged the Blums -- 21 pp - A very funny tale about a pack of boys plotting their revenge against a bully who likes to pick on Jewish kids. Part of their plan includes getting very unorthodox martial arts training from a Russian refusenik who works as a janitor at their school. This story was in the 2006 Best American Short Stories collection.
4. Peep Show -- 15 pp - Another funny, but this time surreal, story about a young, married lawyer who steps into a Times Square peep show, but gets very excited by one of the girls who works there. When he deposits more coins in the machine, to open his window and view her again, the stage has been taken over the rabbis, now naked, who taught him as a boy and want to know why he has abandoned his religion.
5. "Everything I Know About My Family on My Mother's Side" - 21 pp - A story written in short numbered sections about a writer with a Bosnian girlfriend who worries that he doesn't have as interesting a family life as she does - and therefore may not have enough material to create interesting fiction. When he starts to piece together his family history, he discovers there are more interesting stories than he realized - all the while mourning the loss of his girlfriend after she leaves him.
6. Camp Sundown - 25 pp - One of my favorite stories in the collection. Starts off as a very funny tale about the frustrations of a counselor at a Jewish camp for the elderly, but takes a movingly darker turn when some of the older folks plot revenge against a fellow camper they are convinced was a guard at a concentration camp they managed to survive.
7. The Reader -- 18 pp - A writer was once the toast of the town, but 12 years elapsed before he published his next book, and now he's forgotten. He goes on a book tour and faces empty seats at bookstores for his readings - except for one loyal fan who shows up at every reading, in cities across the country, forcing the author to put on the standard show, even though there's no one else in the audience. The slightly surreal piece becomes a great contemplation of the relationship between writers and their readers.
8. Free Fruit for Young Widows - 17 pp - Englander saves the hardest hitting story for last. The story begins with a description about a heartless Israeli soldier who kills four spies in the Israeli army and then savagely beats the man who questions why he did it, when he could have just as easily taken them as prisoners. Years later, the victim of that beating treats that man to fruit from his stand whenever he encounters his former adversary, who has become a professor. The fruit seller's son, knowing the story, wonders how his father could be so kind to a man who was so brutal to him, but then he learns about the soul-deadening atrocities the man experienced in a concentration camp, and the further heartlessness he experienced after the war when he tried to reunite with the non-Jewish family who worked the farm his family owned before they were shipped off to the camps. A grabs-you-by-the-throat powerful story that selected for the 2011 Best American Short Stories collection.
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Bewertet in den USA am27. März 2012The first and last stories in this collection are brilliant. They are intellectually satisfying, funny, and emotionally wrenching. In them Englander manages to address issues and themes that have run through my life, and I suspect many Jewish and half-Jewish (that would be me) Americans born after WWII and the founding of Israel. What role does Judaism as a religion play in our lives? If we do not practice, are we still Jewish? How do we know what we would have done if caught in the horror that was the Holocaust? Who can we trust and how do we judge? It is a measure of Englander's talent that these tales could also be read by someone who does not share the same background and their power would not be diminished. If every story in this collection were as good as these two, this would be a five star book.
Unfortunately, although the pieces in between have their moments, they fail to reach the same level in terms of craft or emotional punch. Englander has still to find a strong balance between incorporating talmudic, magical and folkloric elements into his work in ways that do not feel forced. Too often the experimentation doesn't deepen the reader's experience of the emotional state of the characters, but distracts from it. Did we really need the naked rabbis in "Peep Show" to feel Ari/Alan's guilt over abandoning his usual homeward commute to dash into a Times Square dive? Nor is the choice to promote the central character of "The Reader" to the iconic "The Author" give universality and heft to it's look at aging, and the indiscriminate ability of time to destroy us without sympathy. I would have preferred a more particularized central character who would have elicited my sympathy for his plight rather than being pushed to see this small, uneventful tale as a discourse on the human condition.
Still, even when he doesn't completely succeed, Englander writes with grace, sharp observation and emotional heft. I have looked forward to this new collection since I picked up his first, "For the Relief of Unbearable Urges," on a whim when it was first published. I look forward to his next as well.
Spitzenrezensionen aus anderen Ländern
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Daniel MorgensternBewertet in Großbritannien am 4. März 20125,0 von 5 Sternen Great Book
Great book of short stories by Nathan Englander. The book was ordered in advance of publication and arrived a couple of days after the book actually was published. Great service - thank you very much.
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john brownBewertet in Großbritannien am 7. Oktober 20134,0 von 5 Sternen Title story ain't the one thats worth buying the book for...
There are so many better stories than the title one but the mix of situations gives you a interesting insight into jewish culture whether it be sad, funny or even a wee bit stereotypical...it was an excellent collection and I looked forward to each new story
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VMBewertet in Großbritannien am 5. April 20135,0 von 5 Sternen What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank
What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank - a promising author. Very good quality book.In the rhythm of Etgar
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William JordanBewertet in Großbritannien am 20. Oktober 20123,0 von 5 Sternen different and thought-provoking, but probably not for all readers...
An unusual collection of stories all - or perhaps almost all - of which feature either a moral dilemma, or more often just a moral issue treated in a tone that strikes some reviewers (quoted on the back cover) as both comic and tragic - but which seemed to me to veer uneasily between the two and to be somewhat uncertain.
So: perhaps you are a camp counsellor where a couple of your old residents decide that another old resident is a concentration camp guard (and, if that isn't enough, take action into their own hands), or perhaps you sell your daughter to your neighbour when she's very sick because you think it will cure her and then years later, your neighbour (herself perhaps the victim of a curse) calls you on this...And so on.
It's certainly different; and it's certainly thought-provoking. But it might well not suit all readers...
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MIKEBewertet in Großbritannien am 7. März 20124,0 von 5 Sternen A good read
This book of short stories is well worth reading. It is highly amusing as well as moving. Nathan Englander writes in an
engaging manner about some of the social and political issues facing us to-day.


