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The bright streets of surfside : the memoir of a friendship with Isaac Bashevis Singer / Lester Goran.
Van Pelt Library PJ5129.S49 Z69 1994
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LIBRA - Rare PJ5129.S49 Z69 1994 Potok copy
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- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Goran, Lester.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Singer, Isaac Bashevis, 1904-1991--Friends and associates.
- Singer, Isaac Bashevis.
- Goran, Lester.
- Singer, Isaac Bashevis, 1904-1991.
- Friends and associates.
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Penn Provenance:
- Potok, Adena (donor) (inscription) (Potok Collection copy)
- Potok, Chaim (inscription) (Potok Collection copy)
- Goran, Lester (autograph) (Potok Collection copy)
- Physical Description:
- xiv pages, 2 unnumbered pages, 176 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 23 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Kent, Ohio; London, England : The Kent State University Press, [1994]
- Summary:
- The Bright Streets of Surfside chronicles 10 years in the life of Isaac Bashevis Singer, as witnessed and shared by a fellow writer close to him at the time. In 1978, with a mixture of hero worship and academic responsibility as director of creative writing at the University of Miami, Lester Goran brought Singer to teach at the Coral Gables campus. The eminent Polish-American author was then 74 years old and five months away from receiving the Nobel Prize. Goran became Singer's closest friend and translator as they taught advanced courses in creative writing together until Singer retired in 1988. With a sometimes painful authenticity, Goran recounts the course of their extraordinary friendship. It was a fascinating time, writes Goran, recalling his frustration at Singer's intractable desire not to teach (he mistrusted the faculty and was bewildered by the students) and his pleasure in Singer's company. Touching and humorous, the memoir offers a rare opportunity to learn about this influential Yiddish writer who often concealed his real beliefs, feelings, and personal history from the public. Goran tells the tale with an honesty that is unsparing of his own dilemmas while it is deeply sympathetic to a great writer at odds with himself and his time. Looking frankly at a crucial time in his own life as a writer, Goran derives some understanding of the moral dimensions of Singer's art as he was menaced by the burdens of loss, age, and fame. Goran discusses Singer's philosophies about his life and art, his works in progress, and his lifelong devotion to literature. In addition, he offers his own reflections on working with the last grand Yiddish novelist and on his role in keeping Yiddishalive.
- Contents:
- Part One. Friends
- Part Two. "Ladies, There Are No Rules"
- Part Three. Recognitions at Midnight
- Part Four. A Clear December Day
- Afterword.
- Local Notes:
- Potok Collection copy presented to the Penn Libraries by Adena Potok.
- Potok Collection copy: dustjacket retained.
- Potok Collection copy inscribed "For Adena & Chaim Potok, in delight for a lovely talk - Lester Goran. May 17, 1995."
- Potok Collection copy has note written in ms. from Lester Goran laid.
- ISBN:
- 0873385063
- OCLC:
- 29952978
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