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Bernard Malamud and His Critics by Editor-Leslie A. Field; Editor-Joyce W. Field - 1970-10

by Editor-Leslie A. Field; Editor-Joyce W. Field

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Bernard Malamud and His Critics by Editor-Leslie A. Field; Editor-Joyce W. Field - 1970-10

Bernard Malamud and His Critics

by Editor-Leslie A. Field; Editor-Joyce W. Field

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Bernard Malamud and His Critics -thicker black paperback with quite a bit of wear on the edges- some chipping on its edges tear at top of book - book block is in great shape- well bound interiors clean – there were some notes erased in front of the book first page– book is currently out of print –Bernard Malamud and the Critics New York University press New York New York reprinted 1971 copyright held by New York University Library of Congress catalog card number 70 – 133016 ISBN number 8147 – 2553 – paper cover manufacture United States–- Essayists examine Malamud through various critical perspectives and attempt to evaluate his position in contemporary American fiction-expedited shipping available just choose to check out – info – keywords –Bernard Malamud and the Critics The Gotham library Author Leslie A. Field Editors Leslie A. Field, Joyce W. Field Compiled by Leslie A. Field, Joyce W. Field Contributor Joyce W. Field Edition reprint Publisher New York University Press, 1970 ISBN 081472552X, 9780814725528 Length 353 -obituary-BERNARD MALAMUD, AUTHOR, DIES AT 71....Bernard Malamud, the novelist and short story writer who won two National Book Awards and the Pulitzer Prize for his chronicles of human struggle, died Tuesday at his Manhattan apartment. He was 71 years old......Mr. Malamud's work showed a regard for Jewish tradition and the plight of ordinary men, and was imbued with the theme of moral wisdom gained through suffering.....Mr. Malamud was considered by many critics to be one of the finest contemporary American writers. The critic Robert Alter said that stories like ''The First Seven Years,'' ''The Magic Barrel,'' ''The Last Mohican,'' ''Idiots First'' and ''Angel Levine'' will be read ''as long as anyone continues to care about American fiction written in the 20th century.'' Text:...The author once described himself as a chronicler of ''simple people struggling to make their lives better in a world of bad luck.'' One of his last appearances was at the PEN Congress in New York in January when he read from his works. Combined Fantasy and Reality....In his work, Mr. Malamud often combined fantasy and reality to create a world that was both the same and different from the one we live in.---In ''Angel Levine,'' a black, rather seedy-looking angel appears to a retired Jewish tailor; in ''The Jewbird,'' a Yiddish-accented vagabond makes his way into an urban Jewish household in the form of a crow; in ''Idiots First,'' the Angel of Death, alias Ginzburg, pursues a desperate Jew trying to scrape together money to send his idiot son to California on the midnight train. ''Malamud has been in the fable business, so to speak,'' the critic Alan Lelchuk wrote.-Mr. Malamud's first novel, ''The Natural,'' an allegory about the rise and fall of a baseball player, was published in 1952. It is different from most of his work in that there are no Jewish characters. After the book was made into a movie starring Robert Redford in 1984, Mr. Malamud said in an interview that he was grateful for the film because it allowed him ''to be recognized once more as an American writer'' as opposed to a Jewish writer. But ''The Natural'' is similar to his later novels and stories in that it lies in the realm of a morality play...''Malamud has always had a fondness for telling tales arranged for the purpose of a specific moral lesson,'' Mr. Lelchuk wrote. ''Neither realism nor surrealism has been his forte through the years,'' he continued, ''but the fable, the parable, the allegory, the ancient art of basic storytelling in a modern voice; through this special mode he has earned his high place in contemporary letters.'' ''The Assistant,'' his second novel, and the one many critics consider his best, was published in 1957. Set in the Depression, it tells of a Jewish grocery-store owner and his Italian assistant, and it, too, is much like a morality play...''The Fixer'' (1966) was inspired by the ordeal of Mendel Beiliss, a Jew tried and acquitted of ritual murder in Kiev in czarist Russia of 1913. ''The Magic Barrel,'' the author's first collection of short stories, was given the National Book Award in 1959...On the basis of ''The Assistant'' and ''The Fixer,'' critics began to think of Mr. Malamud as a ''Jewish writer'' along with Saul Bellow and Philip Roth...Mr. Malamud, however, said that he found the label of ''Jewish writer'' inadequate. He said that the three writers shared more differences than similarities, and that, in his case, Jewishness was more a spiritual than a cultural or a religious quality...''I was concerned with what Jews stood for,'' he said, ''with their getting down to the bare bones of things. I was concerned with their ethicality - how Jews felt they had to live in order to go on living.,,''And at another time he commented: ''Jewishness is important to me, but I don't consider myself only a Jewish writer. I have interests beyond that, and I feel I'm writing for all men...Mr. Roth agreed with Mr. Malamud. ''The Jews of 'The Magic Barrel' and the Jews of 'The Assistant' are not the Jews of New York City or Chicago,'' Mr. Roth wrote. ''They are Malamud's invention, a metaphor of sorts to stand for certain possibilities and promises.'' Later Works Criticized
Mr. Malamud's later works - ''Pictures of Fidelman,'' ''The Tenants,'' ''God's Grace'' and to a lesser extent, ''Dubin's Lives'' - got mixed reviews. Many critics cited a growing bleakness in his work, saying that as he left his Jewish milieu for academic and other settings his work took on a flinty emptiness without the poignance and meaning that characterized his earlier novels. His argument with God, they said, seemed to wither into a seminar...Others, however, saw a growth in these works - his handling in ''The Tenants'' of the cultural and psychological upheaval among blacks caused by the rise of nationalism, separatism and racial pride; the powerful presence of nature in ''Dubin's Lives,'' something new for an author whose works for the most part had urban settings, and the concern with man's survival in the nuclear age in ''God's Grace.''
Bernard Malamud was born April 26, 1914, in Brooklyn, the elder of two sons of Russian Jewish immigrants, Max Malamud and the former Bertha Fidelman...His father ran a small grocery, working 16 hours a day - he served as a model for the Jewish grocer in ''The Assistant.'' Looking back on his childhood, Mr. Malamud would recall that there were no books in his home, no cultural nourishment at all except that on Sundays he would listen to someone else's piano through the living-room window..Attended Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, and in 1936 he received his B.A. from the City College of New York. After graduation, he worked in a factory, in various stores and as a clerk in the Census Bureau in Washington, writing in his spare time.-Began Teaching High School..In 1940, he got a job teaching at Erasmus Hall Evening High School, and he would continue to teach in New York City evening high schools until 1949. While he was teaching, he earned an M.A. at Columbia University in 1942.-Mr. Malamud often said that the advent of World War II and the Holocaust first made him sure that he had something to say as a writer. Until then, he said, he had not given much thought to what it meant to be Jewish, but the horror of the war - as well as the fact that he married a gentile woman, Ann de Chiara, in 1945 - made him question his own identity as a Jew and compelled him to start reading about Jewish tradition and history. He knew then, he said, that he really wanted to write.-''The suffering of the Jews is a distinct thing for me,'' he once explained. ''I for one believe that not enough has been made of the tragedy of the destruction of six million Jews. Somebody has to cry - even if it's a writer, 20 years later.''
In 1949, he got a job teaching English at Oregon state University, where he stayed until 1961, becoming an associate professor. He wrote four books there - ''The Natural,'' ''The Assistant,'' ''The Magic Barrel''& his third novel, ''A New Life'' (1961), which is set in the Pacific Northwest at a college not unlike Oregon State...In 1961, he went to teach at Bennington College in Vermont, where he taught for more than 20 years, with the exception of two years he spent as a visiting lecturer at Harvard from 1966 to 1968..In 1963, he published ''Idiots First,'' another story collection. That was followed by ''The Fixer'' (1966), ''Pictures of Fidelman,'' stories about one central character (1969); ''The Tenants,'' a novel about the conflict between two writers, one Jewish and the other black (1971); ''Rembrandt's Hat,'' more stories (1973); ''Dubin's Lives,'' a novel about a biographer in midlife that many critics consider one of his best (1979); ''God's Grace,'' a novel (1982), and ''The Stories of Bernard Malamud'' (1983). 'Story, Story, Story'..Mr. Malamud was a firm believer that a story should tell a story. ''With me, it's story, story, story,'' he once said. ''Writers who can't invent stories often pursue other strategies, even substituting style for narrative. I feel that story is the basic element of fiction though that ideal is not popular with disciples of the 'new novel.' They remind me of the painter who couldn't paint people, so he painted chairs..''The story will be with us as long as man is. You know that, in part, because of its effect on children. It's through story they realize that mystery won't kill them. Through story they learn they have a future...''He did not find writing an easy task. ''The idea is to get the pencil moving quickly,'' he said. ''Once you've got some words looking back at you you can take two or three - or throw them away and look for other. I go over and over a page. Either it bleeds and shows it's beginning to be human, or the form emits shadows of itself and I'm off. I have a terrifying will that way.'',. In his writing, he prized the idea of swift transition - changing a scene in one sentence between paragraphs -and he thought he might have achieved that talent by studying intercutting in motion pictures. ''I was influenced very much by Charlie Chaplin movies,'' he said, ''by the rhythm and snap of his comedy and his wonderful, wonderful mixture of comedy and sadness..He acknowledged that sadness was one of his prime topics. ''People say I write so much about misery,'' he said, but added, ''you write about what you write best.''.He described the essential Malamud character as ''someone who fears his fate, is caught up in it, yet manages to outrun it; he's the subject and object of laughter and pity.'' Left Unfinished Novel
In addition to the Pulitzer and the National Book Awards, Mr. Malamud won the Rosenthal Award of the National Institute of Arts and Letters, Vermont's 1979 Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts and the 1981 Brandeis Creative Arts Award. He was a member of the American Academy and institute of Arts and Letters, which in 1983 presented him its Gold Medal in Fiction. From 1979 to 1981 he was president of the PEN American Center. Yesterday his publisher, Farrar, Straus & Giroux, announced the establishment of a Bernard Malamud literary award, to be administered by PEN. An official at the publishing house also said it will decide at a later date whether to publish separately the novel on which Mr. Malamud was working at the time of his death, or whether to publish parts of it in a posthumous collection. For many years, Mr. Malamud did not become involved in social issues, arguing that for an author writing was involvement enough. But as president of PEN, he protested the repression of writers in the Soviet Union and South Africa and the curtailing of First Amendment rights. Although he granted occasional interviews, Mr. Malamud led an intensely private life. In ''The Ghost Writer,'' Philip Roth created a character named E. I. Lonoff, a novelist ''deeply skeptical of the public world,'' whose ideas of work and esthetic purity obliged him to live a life of solitude. A number of critics have suggested that Lonoff was a portrait of Mr. Malamud. Mr. Roth was a good friend of Mr. Malamud, and it is perhaps he who best summed up Mr. Malamud's work. Noting that Mr. Malamud was once supposed to have remarked that ''all men are Jews,'' Mr. Roth said:
''What it is to be human, and to be humane, is his deepest concern.''
He is survived by his wife and by a son, Paul, and a daughter, Janna. Funeral services will be private, and plans for memorial services in April will be announced at a later date.- Date: March 20, 1986, Thursday, Late City Final Edition Section D; Page 26, Column 1; Cultural Desk Byline: By MERVYN ROTHSTEIN Visually inspected owned by Adults, pictures just as important as written listing .Zoom-In ....LAXVespa Los Angeles. VIEWING PICTURE ON DESKTOP COULD BE HELPFUL --I SHIP EVERY 3- Days or SO.. Shipped with USPS - I'm shipping from Los Angeles - there are planes & trucks constantly leaving...generally 7 Days Coast to Coast quicker if closer..carefully Drop kick-packed....extra handling time built in ..so as not to disappoint ..enough shipping charges so well protected ... inv bmk 11 bib 2231
  • Bookseller Independent bookstores US (US)
  • Format/Binding Paperback
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  • ISBN 10 081472552X
  • ISBN 13 9780814725528
  • Publisher New York University Press
  • Place of Publication New York, Ny, U.s.a.
  • Date Published 1970-10
  • Keywords Bernard Malamud and the Critics New York University press New York New York reprinted 1971 copyright held by New York University Library of Congress catalog card number 70 – 133016 ISBN number 8147 – 2553

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Bernard Malamud and His Critics
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Bernard Malamud and His Critics

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Bernard Malamud and the Critics (The Gotham Library)
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Bernard Malamud and the Critics (The Gotham Library)

by Field, L.A. and Field, J.W. (eds)

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New York University Press, 1970. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. In good all round condition. No dust jacket. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,850grams, ISBN:081472552X
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Bernard Malamud and the Critics
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Bernard Malamud and the Critics

by Leslie A. Field, Joyce W. Field

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New York University Press, 1970. Hardcover. Good. New York University Press, 1970. Good. , Hardcover, Blue cloth. No dust jacket. 353 pages. Ex-library. Text clean. Binding tight. Yellowed glue residue on endpapers. Cover a little faded. Out-of-print and antiquarian booksellers since 1933. We pack and ship with care.
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Bernard Malamud and the Critics

by Field, Leslie A; & Field, Joyce W

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New York: New York University Press, 1970. Ex library copy with creasing to the edges of the dustwrapper, minor bumping to spine ends and corners of blue boards, remains of paper labels inside front board and on f/ep, ink stamp on f/ep and on rev of title page. Otherwise a good clean tight copy of this hard-cover book, being a collection of pieces by different authors on the fiction writings of Bernard Malamud. 353pp.. First Edition. Hard Cover. Good/Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Ex-Library.
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