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Allan Appel’s ‘The Book of Norman’
Books
Fiction
Allan Appel’s ‘The Book of Norman’
by
Sanford Pinsker
It is 1967; students are burning their draft cards to protest the Vietnam War, and Norman Gould finds himself attracted to the resistance.
Books
Fiction
Dara Horn’s Supermom, in ‘Eternal Life’
by
Sanford Pinsker
This richly imaginative novel opens in present-day New York City after Rachel—the eternal wife and mother—loses her most recent husband.
Books
Fiction
Kafka’s Son
by
Sanford Pinsker
Curt Leviant’s latest novel incorporates great moments of madcap comedy as well as pays homage to the world’s best postmodernist novelists.
Books
Fiction
Max Baer & The Star of David
by
Sanford Pinsker
Jay Neugeboren's latest novel intertwines the historical with the fabricated in the story of Max Baer, 1934 heavyweight champion of the world.
Books
Fiction
King of Yiddish
by
Sanford Pinsker
Curt Leviant's latest novel follows the comic misadventures of one Shmulik Gafni, a professor of Yiddish studies at a prestigious Israeli university.
Books
Fiction
Searching for Wallenberg, a Review
by
Sanford Pinsker
Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat, became a legend as one of the most courageous humanitarians of his time.
Books
Fiction
Prayers for the Living
by
Sanford Pinsker
Alan Cheuse is a particularly articulate voice, good at casting a cold eye on the hot-button problems of Jewish life.
Books
Fiction
Many Seconds into the Future
by
Sanford Pinsker
John J. Clayton’s work is inextricably tied to humanism, but as his stories, first published in Commentary magazine, make clear, his fiction is unashamedly Jewish.