Watching his career and marriage disintegrate, Samuel Karnish meets a Hasidic couple from Brooklyn and begins an unlikely friendship with them, an event that leaves him morally confused and doubting his own faith. 15,000 first printing. Tour.
Robert Cohen, Professor of English and American Literatures, is a novelist who teaches both literature and creative writing courses. His books include Amateur Barbarians, Inspired Sleep, The Here and Now, The Organ Builder, and a collection of short stories, The Varieties of Romantic Experience. Prior to teaching at Middlebury he taught at Harvard, Rice, the University of Houston, and the Iowa Writers Workshop. He earned a B.A. from University of California Berkeley and an MFA from Columbia. His stories and essays have appeared in Harpers, Paris Review, GQ, The Believer, and many other magazines, and his awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Whiting Writers Award, a Lila Wallace-Readers Digest Writers Award, a Ribalow Prize, and a Pushcart Prize.
a quote: " There are three things to be learned from children.They're often happy for no particular reason, they're never idle,and when they want something they demand it vigorously." So true.
The book started out engaging, but it didn't really go as far as I would have liked. The main character never seemed to really grow emotionally or spiritually, which purportedly was the purpose of the story, and the ending was vague. Disappointing.
This was such a wonderful, painful novel...I wish Cohen got a louder reception. This is one of the books I love to loan out to friends looking for a good read.
Certains passages sont agréables à lire. Mais quelle est la finalité du livre? Nous rendre plus ou moins religieux ? Beaucoup de dialogues pas toujours très utiles à la compréhension de l’histoire
Samuel Karnish's life is a mess and reeling out of control. By chance he meets an Hasidic couple, the Brenner's, while flying to Houston for his best friend's third wedding. Sam who is a "half Jew" ("What is this mathematics?" asks Brenner) is confronted with his own belief system as this unlikely encounter turns into a friendship, of sorts. OK, he is attracted to Aaron Brenner's very shy, but enigmatic wife. But he really does like Aaron for his intelligence and certainty. So there lies some of the complication.
All in all we follow Samuel through some interesting events as his job, girlfriend, and well everything, bottoms out. There's much humor here and lots of philosophy about the Hebrew faith or any faith for that matter.
Despite being reviewed in the New York Times (and elsewhere too, I imagine) this book seems to have fallen between the cracks. There are no reviews of it here or on Librarything, and I only discovered it by chance.
I liked it a lot. Cohen's writing style grew on me as the book progressed, and the story was good enough to keep me reading even if the writing had not been as good as it was. Best of all, the Hasidic characters in the book are not merely 'spiritual counterweights' to the secular protagonist, like I feared they would be.
This is a fun and easy read, and I recommend it highly. And for those who care about such things: the hardcover edition is a nice looking book!
picked it up in a used book store..so far, so good...it was really great. Forced me to think about my life, my prejudices, and routines. Reminds me of the Niki Manage/ Kanye song "all of the lights"..."living doesn't mean your alive"
I was about to "Here and Now" declare Mr. Cohen as amongst my top ten favorite living authors, but, upon recount, he came up eleventh! It'll happen... in the There and Then.
Kind of interesting. The main characters’ perspective and descriptions of Jewish traditions were presented with an “outsider’s” curiosity, skepticism and envy. Uniquely well-written.