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  • Broschiertes Buch

Sol Nazerman ist der Pfandleiher von Spanish Harlem. Sein Laden ist ein Umschlagplatz für verlorene Träume und verpfuschte Leben. Abends fährt er zurück nach Mount Vernon, wo er zusammen mit seiner Schwester, ihrem Mann und ihren Kindern lebt, die er mit den Erträgen seines Geschäfts unterstützt. Sol ist dem Holocaust entkommen - anders als seine Frau und Kinder. Er musste miterleben, wie sie im Konzentrationslager ermordet wurden. Emotional abgestumpft beobachtet er die Verzweiflung, die ihn umgibt, und führt seine Pfandleihe mit der Härte und Verschlossenheit eines Gangsters. Erst ein…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sol Nazerman ist der Pfandleiher von Spanish Harlem. Sein Laden ist ein Umschlagplatz für verlorene Träume und verpfuschte Leben. Abends fährt er zurück nach Mount Vernon, wo er zusammen mit seiner Schwester, ihrem Mann und ihren Kindern lebt, die er mit den Erträgen seines Geschäfts unterstützt.
Sol ist dem Holocaust entkommen - anders als seine Frau und Kinder. Er musste miterleben, wie sie im Konzentrationslager ermordet wurden. Emotional abgestumpft beobachtet er die Verzweiflung, die ihn umgibt, und führt seine Pfandleihe mit der Härte und Verschlossenheit eines Gangsters. Erst ein dramatischer Einbruch in die Gleichförmigkeit seiner Tage löst seine Erstarrung und lässt ihn vielleicht einen ersten Schritt zurück ins Leben machen. Edward Lewis Wallants wichtigstes Buch ist eines der bewegendsten Werke der modernen Literatur.
Autorenporträt
When he died at 36 in December 1962, Edward Lewis Wallant had published two novels: The Human Season (1960), which received the Harry and Ethel Daroff Memorial Fiction Award for the year's best novel on a Jewish theme, and The Pawnbroker (1961), which was nominated for the National Book Award and secured Wallant a Guggenheim Fellowship. Two additional novelsThe Children at the Gate and Moonbloomwere published posthumously. The Daroff Award was subsequently re-named in Wallant's honor. The Edward Lewis Wallant Award is now presented annually at the University of Hartford in the late author's native Connecticut; recipients have included Chaim Potok, Cynthia Ozick, Francine Prose, and Dara Horn. Dara Horn is the author of four widely acclaimed novels and the recipient of honors including the National Jewish Book Award, the Reform Judaism Fiction Prize, the Harold U. Ribalow Prize, and the Edward Lewis Wallant Award. She earned a PhD in comparative literature from Harvard University and has taught courses in Jewish literature and Israeli history at Sarah Lawrence College and The City University of New York; in 2014, she held the Gerald Weinstock Visiting Professorship in Jewish Studies at Harvard, where she taught Yiddish and Hebrew literature. She lives in New Jersey with her husband and four children.
Rezensionen
In the short time [Wallant] was writing - about three years wherein he considered himself and was considered a serious writer - he was counted as part of a brilliant group of postwar Jewish American writers - Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, Norman Mailer and Philip Roth among them. That Wallant died so young, unable to travel on with these writers, is criminal, especially given how prolific he was. But the novels he finished in his short life are all miniature masterpieces." Dave Eggers

[R]eminiscent of Dostoevski....on every count [ The Pawnbroker ] deserves the attention of every serious reader." Thomas Lask, The New York Times

Wallant has...written an honest and moving book about human experience at its most dismal." R. D. Spector, New York Herald Tribune

Edward Lewis Wallant is a gifted writer who probes with a kind of troubled tenderness into pools of human darkness." David Boroff, Saturday Review

Sol Nazerman, the erudite Shylock of Harlem, is a creature of fasicnating complexity....he is that literary raritythe character whose sorrows seem as real as the reader's own." TIME magazine

Well written and painfully memorable." George Adelman, Library Journal

"[T]he book gains energy from its plot, which involves a mobster and a planned robbery that puts Sol in an awful position that Wallant thoughtfully interrogates throughout: how do you trustfully navigate the world when you've experienced the worst that people are capable of?" Kirkus Reviews

No contemporary novelist was more gifted in the sheer grace of constructing a novel...." Charles Alva Hoyt

an American naturalist in the tradition of Dreiser and Norris...." Robert W. Lewis

We don't need to imagine how shocking The Pawnbroker must have been to readers in the early 1960s because it is still that shocking to us. Without a trace of sentimentality, Edward Lewis Wallant wrote the Great American Novel of Redemption. Before anyone else, he showed us that only by recognizing in others the face of human suffering could the individual survivorwhether male or female, Jewish, black, or Puerto Ricantranscend his or her inheritance of trauma and pain." Eileen Pollack, author of In the Mouth and Breaking and Entering

"Post-Holocaust novel par excellence. Timeless and well ahead of its time. Lose yourself in Wallant's lyrically imbued world of traumatic memories and its collision with contemporary life." Thane Rosenbaum, author of The Golems of Gotham , Second Hand Smoke , and Elijah Visible
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