readerslibrariansacademicsbooksellers
|

| welcome

|titles

|authors

|awards

|reviews

|news

|rights

|about

|contact

|links


Titles > Fiction > Short Stories > Survivors: Seven Short Stories


enlarge image

Survivors:
Seven Short Stories

by Chava Rosenfarb
Translated from the Yiddish by Goldie Morgentaler
 

Short Stories

ISBN:
978-1-896951-65-2
317 pages
Hardcover
5.125" x 7.625"
$29.95
Survivors: Seven Short Stories
by Chava Rosenfarb
Translated from the Yiddish by Goldie Morgentaler


Nominated for the Howard O'Hagan Award for Short Fiction of the Alberta Book Awards.

Winner of the 2005 Canadian Jewish Book Award.


ALTA National Translation Award 2005, nominee

In these seven stories, survivors of the holocaust play out that tragedy's last acts.

Barukh, in The Greenhorn, is a newly arrived immigrant in Montreal and is an oddity for reasons beyond the winter coat he continues to wear long into spring. As a dying request, Amalia, in Last Love, asks her husband to find her a young Parisian lover. In Edgia's Revenge, Rella, a former kapo, loses her identity over the course of two decades in Montreal to the woman whose life she spared in the camps. François is the account of a crumbling marriage; in it, Leah takes on an imaginary lover. The wife in Little Red Bird imagines kidnapping a baby from the nursery in the hospital so that she will be able to love, nurture, and raise a child of her own.

These are stories of exile. Of life, loss, and love. In Survivors, Chava Rosenfarb takes the Yiddish short story, in the tradition of Isaac Bashevis Singer, and extends it with touches of Philip Roth and Gabriel Garcia Marquez.


About Chava Rosenfarb.
   



Reviews:

“One of the best Yiddish writers today.”
— Elie Wiesel

“Following a series of mighty works about Jewish life in pre-war Poland and about Jewish crises during the Shoah, Chava Rosenfarb turns to the no less compelling subject of survivors who managed to make their way to calmer shores. These gripping stories by one of Canada’s finest writers illumine a part of society that remains mostly hidden from view.”
— Ruth Wisse

“This collection of short stories is a challenging work that offers glimpses into the long-term trauma of the Holocaust on its survivors.”
— The Montreal Gazette