A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories is a 1973 book of short stories written by Isaac Bashevis Singer. It shared the 1974 National Book Award for Fiction with Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon.[1] The twenty-four (24) stories in this collection were translated from Yiddish (Singer's language of choice for writing) by Singer, Laurie Colwin, and others.[2]
Contents
editThe stories appear in the following sequence:[3]
- "A Crown of Feathers"
- "A Day in Coney Island"
- "The Captive"
- "The Blizzard"
- "Property"
- "The Lantuch"
- "The Son from America"
- "The Briefcase"
- "The Cabalist of East Broadway"
- "The Bishop's Robe"
- "A Quotation from Klopstock"
- "The Magazine"
- "Lost"
- "The Prodigy"
- "The Third One"
- "The Recluse"
- "A Dance and a Hop"
- "Her Son"
- "The Egotist"
- "The Beard"
- "The Dance"
- "On a Wagon"
- "Neighbors"
- "Grandfather and Grandson"
Reception
editAlfred Kazin noted in his 1974 review of the book in The New York Times that: "Isaac Bashevis Singer is an extraordinary writer. And this new collection of stories, like so much that he writes, represents the most delicate imaginative splendor, wit, mischief and, not least, the now unbelievable life that Jews once lived in Poland."[4]
References
edit- ^ "National Book Awards – 1974". National Book Foundation.
With essay by Harold Augenbraum from the Awards 60-year anniversary blog. - ^ A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories, translated by Isaac Bashevis Singer, Laurie Colwin, and others (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1973) ISBN 0374132178
- ^ "Isaac Bashevis Singer: Collected Stories: A Friend of Kafka to Passions | Library of America". www.loa.org.
- ^ "A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories". archive.nytimes.com.
External links
edit- A Crown of Feathers, by Isaac Bashevis Singer; A Shtetl and Other Yiddish Novellas, edited by Ruth R. Wisse a review by Johanna Kaplan, published on February 2, 1974, in Commentary Magazine