Die Brüder Aschkenasi

Roman , #12313

Paperback, 503 pages

German language

Published June 20, 1991 by Rowohlt Verlag.

ISBN:
978-3-499-12313-9
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OCLC Number:
75300769

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4 stars (3 reviews)

The Brothers Ashkenazi (1936) (Yiddish: ‏די ברידער אַשכּנזי‎ Di brider Ashkenazi) is a novel by Israel Joshua Singer. Written in Yiddish, it first appeared serially in the Jewish daily Forward between 1934 and 1935, after Singer had left Poland and moved to New York. It was published in book form in Poland in 1936, the same year in which Knopf published an English translation by Maurice Samuel. It was at the top of The New York Times Best Seller list along with Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind. In 1980 a new translation was published by the author's son, Joseph Singer.

3 editions

Review of 'The Brothers Ashkenazi' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is an excellent companion to the World War One readings I've been doing for the past several weeks, a subject pretty unknown to me.

The Brothers Ashkenazi follows the lives of twin brothers in Lodz, Poland from the latter 1800's to just past the first world war. Max, the striver and schemer, works hard to accumulate great wealth and become 'King of Lodz'. His younger, handsomer, more charming brother lucks into equal levels of success.

The rise and fall of the family correlates with the history of Lodz - the industrialization of the city, the development of socialist movements and workers' rebellions, the rise of Trotsky, pogroms at every turn. The turbulence of Eastern Europe is practically a character in the novel, rather than a setting.

There are more characters in this book that you might not want to spend a lot of time with, if this were your …

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4 stars