Description
Fiction. Jewish Studies. Short Stories. Jews being Jewish: that's the subject of Jennifer Anne Moses' new collection of short stories. Whether in Tel Aviv, suburban New Jersey, or the Deep South, the characters who populate the pages of THE MAN WHO LOVED HIS WIFE grapple with God, their loved ones, fate, death, hope, Hitler, transcendence, and the 4000 year old history of Judaism. With a Yiddish sensibility born of passion, an eye for detail, and a deadpan sense of humor reminiscent of Singer, Salinger, and Tillie Olsen, Moses captures singularly Jewish and wholly human characters as they live and breathe through their stories. A secular Israeli loses his son twice, first to ultra-Orthodoxy and then to war. An elderly survivor of Nazism living in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, believes his dog to be the reincarnation of his long-dead sister. Meanwhile, in Queens, an adolescent boy mistakes love for magic and brings his family to the brink of catastrophe. Lovely, tender, and hard to put down, these are short stories that leave you yearning for more.Jennifer Anne Moses is our century's Bernard Malamud or Saul Bellow. With warmth, tenderness, and wit, she captures the essence of the modern Jewish experience in the family, the workplace, and the bedroom. It leaves you hungry for more.--Gabrielle GlaserIt started with Sholom Aleichem, and continued with Seinfeld, but few others writing today explore as profoundly the stress of childhood, adolescence, and parenthood on the second and third generations of East European immigrants--the Jewish family in its American incarnation--as Jennifer Anne Moses. Her craft and integrity shine as she digs for the truths that her characters try to hide.--Sol GittelmanA holocaust survivor's not-so-lucky sister returns to him in the shape of a Golden Retriever; a father's rant about his fanatically religious son turns into a bittersweet eulogy; one of a series of tall-tales concocted to impress a girl lands the tale-teller's father in jail; a brother confesses to his unsympathetic sister his fixation with a college crush best remembered for an episode involving a banana; a son struggles to quell the libidinous exploits of his nursing-home-bound mother...At their finest the stories in Jennifer Ann Moses' THE MAN WHO LOVED HIS WIFE have the wit, whimsy, and surreal wonder of Chagall paintings--but a dark, depraved Chagall whose angels are as deeply flawed as they are grittily earthbound.--Peter SelginThe wonderful stories in Jennifer Ann Moses' THE MAN WHO LOVED HIS WIFE play the heartstrings like a harp, striking deep chords of pathos and passion to wild chords of hilarity. Seldom does such essential wisdom come in such an entertaining package.--Steve Stern