Steve Stern
Born
Memphis, Tennessee, The United States
Genre
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The Frozen Rabbi
23 editions
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published
2010
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The Village Idiot
3 editions
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published
2022
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The Pinch
13 editions
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published
2015
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The Angel of Forgetfulness
5 editions
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published
2005
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The North of God
2 editions
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published
2008
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The Book of Mischief: New and Selected Stories
9 editions
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published
2012
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Lazar Malkin Enters Heaven: Stories
8 editions
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published
1987
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The Wedding Jester
2 editions
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published
1999
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A Plague of Dreamers: Three Novellas
2 editions
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published
1994
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A Fool's Kabbalah
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“Sometimes, when I couldn’t afford to pay the utility bill at the end of the month, I was forced to read by the light of the stories themselves.”
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“The golem is for Franz Kafka big headache.." The ache, he confided, grew in Kafka's head, spreading throughout his bones, his joints swelling until there was no longer room in the writer's skin for both himself and the golem; then his skin split at the seams, and the creature burst forth like the Incredible Hulk, thereby expelling Kafka from his own body.
What do you have in common with Jews?" Svatopluk was whispering in my ear. "This, Kafka us asked at a crucial point in his life, and replies, 'I have nothing in common with myself, and should sit quietly in corner content that I can breathe.'"
Highly suggestible, I saw the monster born from Kafka's brain not as a magical or supernatural creation but a behaimeh member of the community that trafficked in the impossible. I saw the creature lumbering gumby-like behind his plodding master just as I had followed Svat, or poor dead Billy or Aunt Keni Shendeldecker, the only woman I'd ever loved; I saw the citizens of the rabbi's courtyard gossiping, making lame jokes about the golem's marriageability and his alleged prowess in bed.”
― The Angel of Forgetfulness
What do you have in common with Jews?" Svatopluk was whispering in my ear. "This, Kafka us asked at a crucial point in his life, and replies, 'I have nothing in common with myself, and should sit quietly in corner content that I can breathe.'"
Highly suggestible, I saw the monster born from Kafka's brain not as a magical or supernatural creation but a behaimeh member of the community that trafficked in the impossible. I saw the creature lumbering gumby-like behind his plodding master just as I had followed Svat, or poor dead Billy or Aunt Keni Shendeldecker, the only woman I'd ever loved; I saw the citizens of the rabbi's courtyard gossiping, making lame jokes about the golem's marriageability and his alleged prowess in bed.”
― The Angel of Forgetfulness
Topics Mentioning This Author
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Cozy Mysteries :
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15570 | 1194 | Mar 21, 2016 09:15AM | |
The Seasonal Read...:
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Reading with Style:
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1335 | 128 | Aug 31, 2017 09:00PM | |
The Seasonal Read...:
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2921 | 503 | Aug 31, 2017 09:01PM | |
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WACKY READING CHA...: The Princess Bride Movie Challenge | 210 | 159 | Nov 28, 2020 10:53AM | |
Jewish Book Club: Related Book Clubs | 106 | 183 | Aug 24, 2023 06:40PM |
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