El Hombre Canción es una obra como ninguna otra. Terriblemente inocente y a la vez mostrando un realismo sin piedad, tan auténtico como audaz.Es una historia hermosa, y extremadamente triste. El hombre Canción es realismo mágico, un cuento inescapablemente cómico.Carcajadas y llantos. Es una novela sobre un niño que trae dentro del corazón solo amor, nobleza, curiosidad y alegría infinita para lo que es, o puede ser su mundo. El niño se encuentra, como es nuestro destino, en un mundo que sin importarle lo que debería de ser, es lo que es.Pero posiblemente el niño nos enseña algo glorioso que normalmente se encuentra más allá de nuestro horizonte... un niño con una chispita de Dios puede retar a la desgracia del mundo. Puede ser El Hombre Canción.Lee la historia del hombre canción, recordarás algo de lo que se te ha perdido. Nunca olvidarás este cuento tan trágicamente precioso.
An authentic literary great, Singer was an author whose extraordinary talents won him a worldwide audience. And with this impressive novel, he proved that he was at the height of his creative power until his recent death at age 86. Scum evokes the teeming life of 1906 Warsaw's backstreets. Max Barabander, distraught over the recent death of his son, flees the life of wealth and respectability he has attained in Buenos Aires, to return to the poverty and shadows of his youth spent in Warsaw. He fears impotence which leads him to the pursuit of mindless sex with five different women who view him only as an escape from their drab lives. The author recalls the teeming life of 1906 Jewish Warsaw in this impressive novel of changing mores and values. . .
For more than eighty years the Jewish Daily Forward's legendary advice column, "A Bintel Brief" ("a bundle of letters") dispensed shrewd, practical, and fair-minded advice to its readers. Created in 1906 to help bewildered Eastern European immigrants learn about their new country, the column also gave them a forum for seeking advice and support in the face of problems ranging from wrenching spiritual dilemmas to petty family squabbles to the sometimes hilarious predicaments that result when Old World meets New. Isaac Metzker's beloved selection of these letters and responses has become for today's readers a remarkable oral record not only of the varied problems of Jewish immigrant life in America but also of the catastrophic events of the first half of our century. Foreword and Notes by Harry Golden
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