Description

Book Synopsis
First published in 1936, The People of Godlbozhits depicts the ordinary yet deeply complex life of a Jewish community, following the fortunes of one family and its many descendants. Set in a shtetl in Poland between the world wars, Rashkin's satiric novel offers a vivid cross-section not only of the residents' triumphs and struggles but also of their dense and complicated web of humanity.

Trade Review
The novel is an element—an important, albeit neglected, one—in the puzzle of Yiddish literature created in the pre-Holocaust decades of the 20th century. Jordan Finkin’s excellent translation gives a chance to include Rashkin’s literary legacy in the contemporary academic discourse.' - Gennady Estraikh, clinical professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, New York University

'A major work capturing the penultimate hour of Polish Jewish existence. . . . It is both hilarious and gruesome. The act of translating [it]is an invaluable gift for mankind, for we are offered an inside view of a battered but still vibrant Jewish world that no one could have expected to be exterminated to its roots within three years.' - Seth Wolitz, professor emeritus, Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, University of Texas

The People of Godlbozhits

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    A Paperback by Leyb Rashkin, Jordan Finkin

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      Publisher: MP-SYR Syracuse University P
      Publication Date: 9/30/2017 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780815610922, 978-0815610922
      ISBN10: 0815610920

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      First published in 1936, The People of Godlbozhits depicts the ordinary yet deeply complex life of a Jewish community, following the fortunes of one family and its many descendants. Set in a shtetl in Poland between the world wars, Rashkin's satiric novel offers a vivid cross-section not only of the residents' triumphs and struggles but also of their dense and complicated web of humanity.

      Trade Review
      The novel is an element—an important, albeit neglected, one—in the puzzle of Yiddish literature created in the pre-Holocaust decades of the 20th century. Jordan Finkin’s excellent translation gives a chance to include Rashkin’s literary legacy in the contemporary academic discourse.' - Gennady Estraikh, clinical professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, New York University

      'A major work capturing the penultimate hour of Polish Jewish existence. . . . It is both hilarious and gruesome. The act of translating [it]is an invaluable gift for mankind, for we are offered an inside view of a battered but still vibrant Jewish world that no one could have expected to be exterminated to its roots within three years.' - Seth Wolitz, professor emeritus, Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, University of Texas

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