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Sunday Jews - by Hortense Calisher (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Hortense Calisher has been hailed as "stand[ing] vividly with Cather and Fitzgerald" (Cynthia Ozick).
- About the Author: Hortense Calisher has written more than twenty books.
- 712 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Sagas
Description
About the Book
Calisher has been hailed as "stand[ing] vividly with Cather and Fitzgerald" (Cynthia Ozick). In this novel she explores a family united in blood yet divided by ideas. Told with wit and deep acuity, "Sunday Jews "is a tour de force from a writer whose fiction has been compared with Eudora Welty and Henry James.
Book Synopsis
Hortense Calisher has been hailed as "stand[ing] vividly with Cather and Fitzgerald" (Cynthia Ozick). In this, her latest and most lauded novel, she explores a family united in blood yet divided by ideas. Son Charles hopes to be a Supreme Court justice; family beauty Nell has children by different lovers; art expert Erika has a nose job; and artist Zach has two wives. Their mother, infamous in Israel, born of a well-to-do Boston background but no longer rich, is bound to a past that never quite dies. The buried history of this extraordinary--and very American--family comes to light unexpectedly when grandson Bert brings home as a wife the woman who, years ago, joined the family circle, then mysteriously disappeared.
Told with wit and deep acuity, Sunday Jews is a tour de force from a writer whose fiction has justly been compared with that of Eudora Welty and Henry James, and whose ability to delineate our lives is unparalleled.
From the Back Cover
A rich family saga and a crowning achievement from a grande dame of American letters
Hortense Calisher has been hailed as "stand[ing] vividly with Cather and Fitzgerald" (Cynthia Ozick). In this, her latest and most lauded novel, she explores a family united in blood yet divided by ideas. Son Charles hopes to be a Supreme Court justice; family beauty Nell has children by different lovers; art expert Erika has a nose job; and artist Zach has two wives. Their mother, infamous in Israel, born of a well-to-do Boston background but no longer rich, is bound to a past that never quite dies. The buried history of this extraordinary--and very American--family comes to light unexpectedly when grandson Bert brings home as a wife the woman who, years ago, joined the family circle, then mysteriously disappeared.
Told with wit and deep acuity, Sunday Jews is a tour de force from a writer whose fiction has justly been compared with that of Eudora Welty and Henry James, and whose ability to delineate our lives is unparalleled.
"A rare fictional exploration of a great and disturbing theme." -- Washington Post Book World
"Summons a genuinely affecting lyrical elegiac voice, celebrating lives and ways of life as they pass into something else." -- Newsday
Hortense Calisher has written more than twenty books. Past president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and of PEN, she has been a National Book Award finalist three times and has won an O. Henry Award, as well as a Guggenheim Fellowship. She lives in New York City.
Review Quotes
PRAISE FOR HORTENSE CALISHER
"When American writing of the twentieth century is summed up . . . Hortense Calisher will be seen to stand vividly with Cather and Fitzgerald." --Cynthia Ozick
"Hortense Calisher inherited and, today, uniquely embodies the vision of an author as the natural chronicler of her age." --Allan Gurganus
"Her tales are all a form of amber, sealing unforgettable moments in time. And Hortense Calisher is better at this sort of sealing than any other writer I know of." --Anne Tyler
About the Author
Hortense Calisher has written more than twenty books. Past president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and of PEN, she has been a National Book Award finalist three times and has won an O. Henry Award, as well as a Guggenheim Fellowship. She lives in New York City.