Here is 700 pages on Jewish life in Poland. It’s considered the last great Yiddish novel, apparently. It has a plot, kind of, or more like multiple plots, not all of which overlap. It also has a truly vast array of characters. Particularly I noted how much he liked to describe people, even minor ones. It took me a while to figure out what era we were in, and eventually I figured out it was the 1930s. Ah. I get it, he’s trying to capture a whole world. The introduction tells me this is indeed the case; he grew up in Vilna, which has 70,000 Jewish people before the war, and only a few hundred afterwards. His mother and first wife were in the same mass grave. He described himself to a friend in a letter as a’gravestone carver of my vanished world’ and said:
“I’ve always found it strange that I have so little faith and yet believe, with complete faith, that Providence saved me and allowed me to live, in order to immortalize the great that generation that I knew”
It was an odd book. At first it was kind of boring, I kept thinking I was going to quit, but the more I got into it, the more I got into it. I felt kind of bereft once it was over, and really weirdly close to Polish Jews of the1930s. I guess that was his goal. For what it’s worth, they live for me.
