You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Small Worlds »

Book cover image of Small Worlds by Allen Hoffman

Authors: Allen Hoffman
ISBN-13: 9780789205827, ISBN-10: 0789205823
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Abbeville Press, Incorporated
Date Published: May 1999
Edition: (Non-applicable)

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Allen Hoffman

Book Synopsis

The little town of Krimsk is about to observe Tisha B'Av, the calamitous day of mourning marking the destruction of the ancient holy Temple in Jerusalem. The beloved rebbe has mysteriously emerged from years of seclusion, and the Krimskers, thirsty for guidance, seek the wonder-working rebbe's saintly advice throughout the night. The encounters prove to be comic, sober, and wise, as arson, adultery, romance, seduction, and violence sweep through Krimsk and into the Polish town of Krimichak across the river. In Krimichak dwells Grannie Zara, the rebbe's rival for power. The women of Krimsk have always secretly crossed the river to consult her, and on this fateful night, one determined woman and one curious boy from the primary class urgently feel the need to visit her. The relationship between the two towns, always uneasy, is in danger of igniting. Back in Krimsk, the rebbe and his wife discuss a groom for their only daughter, and the rebbe summons the man he has chosen. But a different young man, a stranger swept up in the revolutionary ferment stirring all Russia, stops for a while at the Angel of Death, the empty, cursed synagogue. It is he who will face the angry mob from Krimichak as it crosses the bridge into Krimsk with consequences that will affect and astound everyone.

Publishers Weekly

Abbeville's decision to issue this novel, the first fiction ever from this publisher of illustrated books, may not be as signal an event as Tom Clancy's debut from the Naval Institute Press, but it is nonetheless a welcome surprise. Set in the Russian-controlled Polish town of Krimsk in 1903, this vibrant tale evokes the lost world of Eastern European Jewry. In Krimsk, a revered Hasidic rabbi, Reb Yaakov Moshe Finebaum, is mystical mentor to the faithful and nonbelievers alike. Ending a self-imposed five-year silence during which he struggled against the forces of evil and impurity, the ascetic, reclusive rabbi impulsively ushers in Tisha B'Av, a solemn holiday commemorating the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, by dancing boisterously on a tabletop with a retarded boy. Hoffman lovingly depicts a community where Jewish mysticism, Talmudic laws, folk superstitions and anti-czarist revolutionary socialism mingle obstreperously, and where the transcendent unexpectedly erupts into everyday life, as when the rebbe makes passionate love to his wife, or when he rescues the Torah from his burning synagogue, torched by an anti-Semitic mob. Swinging between yeasty comedy and tragedy, this pungent first novel follows Rabbi Finebaum to St. Louis, where he starts a new religious community to spread the message of messianic redemption to America. Less folksy than Sholem Aleichem, and less obsessed with demons and sex than I.B. Singer, Hoffman has a distinctive voice characterized by dry wit and ironic asides. Though he exhibits a thorough knowledge of the world of his forefathers, it is his insight into human nature that invests this story with charm and wisdom. (Oct.) FYI: Small Worlds is the first in a projected series of novels about the residents of Krimsk and their descendants in the U.S., Poland, Russia and Israel. Hoffman's 1982 story collection, Kagan's Superfecta, won the Edgar Lewis Wallant Award.

Table of Contents

Subjects


 

 

« Previous Book La-Bas
Next Book » The Ballad of Peckham Rye