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Pearl Abraham

    16 ottobre 1960

    Pearl Abraham si addentra nell'intricata interazione tra tradizione e modernità, esplorando la ricerca dell'identità nella diaspora. La sua prosa seziona magistralmente profonde emozioni e tensioni culturali con acuta intuizione psicologica. Abraham interroga temi di fede, famiglia e appartenenza, spesso illuminando le vite interiori di personaggi che navigano tra mondi disparati. Offre ai lettori una ricca esplorazione delle esperienze di coloro che si sforzano di riconciliare la propria eredità con il proprio presente.

    Abschied von Amerika
    De romanlezeres: voorheen Vreugde der wet
    Een sterke vrouw, wie zal haar vinden?
    Giving Up America
    The Seventh Beggar
    The Romance Reader
    • The Seventh Beggar

      • 400pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      A modern-day young man becomes obsessed with the life and teachings of the legendary nineteenth-century Chasidic master Nachman of Bratslava, a kabbalist, storyteller, and charismatic spiritual leader who developed a cult following, in a novel intertwined with a translation of Nachman's Yiddish tales, including his "Tales of the Seven Beggars." Reprint.

      The Seventh Beggar2005
      3,1
    • Bloemlezing van verhalen en romanfragmenten over zeventien bijzondere joodse vrouwenfiguren in de wereldliteratuur. Samenstelling en inleiding door Pearl Abraham

      Een sterke vrouw, wie zal haar vinden?2000
      3,3
    • Deena, who defied the wishes of her father, a Hasidic scholar, to marry the non-Hasidic Daniel, must come to terms with betrayals, the nature of commitment, and her own spiritual needs and values. Reprint. Tour. NHT.

      Giving Up America1998
    • Geen badpakken, dunne panty's of mouwloze jurken. Geen radio of televisie. Niet zingen, niet dansen of zelfs maar een man een hand geven. Dat is de dagelijkse werkelijkheid waarin Rachel Benjamin, de oudste dochter van een chassidische rabbijn, opgroeit. Maar Rachels intelligente, nieuwsgierigheid en verlangen brengen haar ertoe telkens weer de strenge wetten die haar vader strikt naleeft te ontduiken. Vooral als het om het lezen van boeken gaat. Pearl Abraham beschrijft in De romanlezeres op indrukwekkende wijze de orthodox-joodse gemeenschap vanuit het perspectief van een meisje.

      De romanlezeres: voorheen Vreugde der wet1996
    • The Romance Reader

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      From Publishers Weekly: Abraham shows strong talent in her debut novel, the story of a young girl's coming-of-age in an ultraorthodox Hasidic home. The reader soon cares deeply about narrator Rachel, the eldest of six children, who yearns for some of the forbidden fruits of the secular world. Her rebbe father is another endearing character; he dreams of establishing a major synagogue and learning center even while he desperately looks for a 10th man for a minyan for his sparse congregation. Most of the story takes place in a suburban community that receives an influx of Hasidim in the summer months; for the rest of the year, the rebbe's family is the neighborhood curiosity. Rachel is a dutiful child who tries hard to please her mother, an angry woman who belittles her husband's dreams and wants to be part of one of Brooklyn's larger Hasidic enclaves. Rachel's glimpses of the larger world come from casual and often uncomfortable encounters with non-Jews and secular Jews in her town, but especially from romance novels, which she reads secretly. Her seemingly flagrant behavior (she refuses to wear seamed, opaque stockings, opting instead for seamless, and will not wear a cover-up over her bathing suit while teaching young girls to swim) brings shame to her family and endangers a marital opportunity for her brilliant younger brother.

      The Romance Reader1995
      3,6