Authors: Joel ben Izzy
ISBN-13: 9781565125124, ISBN-10: 1565125126
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Date Published: September 2005
Edition: (Non-applicable)
JOEL BEN IZZY tells stories at festivals throughout the world and has written and produced six CDs, which have won awards from the American Library Association and the Parents’ Choice Foundation. He’s been a storytelling consultant to various companies, including Hewlett-Packard, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, and Pixar Animation Studios. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife and two children.
"Wonderful!” (Grace Paley).
“Heartwarming and smart and wonderfully written” (Detroit Free Press).
“Provides edifying advice, intimately given, like the best-selling Tuesdays with Morrie” (the Dallas Morning News).
“Altogether original” (Dr. Laura Schlessinger).
“This story will speak to the humanity of the reader” (Jewish Book World).
The Beggar King and the Secret of Happiness is that rare, magical book—a book that tells a good story but also shows us how the tales we learned when we were children shed light on our adult lives. Joel ben Izzy had the unusual opportunity to relive those lessons when he lost his voice and reconnected with his old teacher, Lenny, a retired storyteller. Through his meetings with Lenny, Joel rediscovers the wisdom of ancient tales and takes us on a journey into a world of beggars and kings, monks and tigers, lost horses and buried treasures—and in the end tells us the secret of happiness.
First-time author ben Izzy's vocation as a professional storyteller may fill his life with heady myth and poetry, but as he acknowledges early on in this slim but memorable recollection of personal tragedy, "the absence of magic" in his childhood is the very thing "that sent me looking for it." He found it in the unlikeliest and most cruelly ironic way. After undergoing surgery to remove thyroid cancer, ben Izzy lost his voice-the instrument of not only his art, but also his livelihood. Telling himself that a return to the routine of performance would spark a recovery, ben Izzy accepted an offer to perform at a bar mitzvah, but only "whispers and gasps" emerged. Retreating into self-pity, anger, hopelessness and sullen solitude, the author searched, like the protagonists in the stories he used to tell, for a spiritual explanation of the loss. He reconnected with his estranged, cantankerous mentor, who offered support by telling dizzyingly enigmatic stories hinting at the idea that ben Izzy had been given a magical gift by losing his voice. When a doctor suggested he might be able to help ben Izzy speak again in a risky procedure, ben Izzy's wife told him she liked him better without it, an incident the author does not satisfyingly explain. But ben Izzy successfully translates the best elements of oral storytelling to the page; his memoir shines with brisk suspense as well as his unerring, precise eye for including only the elements of his hard-won wisdom that matter the most. (Nov. 7) Forecast: Ben Izzy, who now has his voice back, will go on a 12-city tour, which will certainly boost sales. The book, which is 5" 7", could become a popular holiday gift. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Prologue: The Beggar King | 1 | |
Ch. 1 | The Lost Horse | 13 |
Ch. 2 | The Cricket Who Jumped to the Moon | 31 |
Ch. 3 | Optimism and Pessimism | 51 |
Ch. 4 | The Vow of Silence | 63 |
Ch. 5 | The Search for Truth | 83 |
Ch. 6 | The Border Guard | 99 |
Ch. 7 | The Appointment | 109 |
Ch. 8 | The Wisdom of Chelm | 130 |
Ch. 9 | Buried Treasures | 141 |
Ch. 10 | The Strawberry | 159 |
Ch. 11 | Hershel's Last Laugh | 173 |
Ch. 12 | The Happy Man's Shirt | 183 |
Ch. 13 | The Fox in the Garden | 195 |
Ch. 14 | The Secret of Happiness | 208 |
Epilogue: The Beggar King | 213 | |
About the Stories | 217 | |
Acknowledgments | 227 |