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241 pages, Paperback
First published September 4, 2013
You can't remember the precise moment when you understood that you were a Jew. It seems to you that it came sometime after you were old enough to identify yourself as an American.Is he sitting on his own forehead with a stethoscope pressed to his own scalp detecting thoughts? He also says he is trying to avoid the physical parts of his life. However that seems to be almost impossible. The most annoying part is the way he will give a bit of information but ignore it. For instance his parents divorced. Why? When? He also says he won't go beyond the age of 12 but he devotes about a third of the text to (1) extensive exposition and critique of two movies (2) letters he wrote as a university student to his future wife. The last section of the book is a collection of personal photographs and posters. They are intended to complement the text but I think it would have been much more effective if they ran simultaneously or were referenced. By the time I was done reading I wasn't much interested in looking at his scrapbook.