Aaron, past chair of the DC conference and chai of the Fanny Goldstein Merit 
Award a and the new AJL Literary award as well as  a poet in his own merit is 
making us proud again.
Mazle tov Aaron! 
Amalia Warshenbrot
AJL President

From: Yermiyahu Ahron Taub 
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2016 7:28 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [ha-Safran] Oedipus in Brooklyn and Other Stories by Blume Lempel
Dear Safranim, 

I am delighted to announce the publication of Oedipus in Brooklyn and Other 
Stories by Blume Lempel and translated from the Yiddish by Ellen Cassedy 
(www.ellencassedy.com) and me.  The book is co-published by Mandel Vilar Press 
and Dryad Press and is available for purchase via Dryad Press 
(http://www.dryadpress.com/Oedipus.htm), amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, and 
Politics & Prose.  Advance praise is below.

For those of you in or near the Washington, D.C. area, the book launch will be 
held at Politics and Prose Bookstore, 5015 Connecticut Avenue NW, Washington, 
D.C. 20008 on Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 1 p.m.  The event is free with no 
reservation required.  Please save the date.

Thank you in advance for your support!

All my best, 
Ahron

www.yataub.net




Advance Praise for Oedipus in Brooklyn and Other Stories by Blume Lempel





>From Poland to Tel Aviv to Brooklyn, in lyrical prose, Lempel's stories give 
>voice to memory, longing, and loss in the rich tradition of Jewish 
>storytelling. Lempel's Jewish storytelling, illustrates, as the author puts 
>it: 'No world language is comparable to Yiddish, to the Yiddish sigh, the 
>Yiddish sense of humor.'



--Victoria Aarons, author of What Happened to Abraham? Reinventing the Covenant 
in American Jewish Fiction



Blume Lempel died at the end of the last century, leaving a remarkable legacy 
that this beautifully translated volume finally makes accessible to a wider 
audience. She writes about the erotic and intellectual life of (mostly) women 
and men, their psychological and historical motivations, the horror of the 
Holocaust and the desire to renew life even as one mourns. For these 
characters, as for Lempel herself, writing, thinking, lamenting, and loving in 
Yiddish is a vital expression of the will to live.



--Anita Norich, author of Writing in Tongues: Translating Yiddish in the 20th 
Century



Blume Lempel’s short story collection is a splendid surprise and a significant 
revivication of a brilliantly robust Yiddish-American writer.  Why should Isaac 
Bashevis Singer and Chaim Grade monopolize this rich literary lode?



--Cynthia Ozick, author of Foreign Bodies and Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and 
Other Literary Monsters



In all twenty-three of her collected stories Blume Lempel conducts a 
conversation across multiple time zones and spheres. She talks to Moses and 
Galileo; to the insects, birds, and primates; to the forests and fields; to the 
sun, stars, moon, and moon landing. Even as her memorable cast of characters 
relive their childhood and first love; even as they make breakfast, go out on a 
date, marvel at Yosemite Park or get caught in a blizzard, their minds are 
short-circuited by the horrors of what happened to the Jews of Europe. For this 
is a conversation against time and place, a heroic effort to create and sustain 
a choir of voices in Yiddish, her beloved and endangered language.



--David G. Roskies, author of Against the Apocalypse: Responses to Catastrophe 
in Modern Jewish Culture





The thematic and stylistic scope of Blume Lempel's writing, as demonstrated 
admirably by Cassedy and Taub’s translations, is wide and richly integrated. 
Stories mingle the prewar East European past with the American present, 
personal memories and encounters with a provocative range of larger issues - 
memory, religion, sexuality, race, feminism, good and evil, death.



--Jeffrey Shandler, author of Adventures in Yiddishland: Postvernacular 
Language and Culture


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL)
==================================
Submissions for Ha-Safran, send to:
[email protected]
To join Ha-Safran, update or change your subscription, etc. - click here: 
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran
Questions, problems, complaints, compliments send to: [email protected]
Ha-Safran Archives:
Current:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.service.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
Earlier Listserver:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.acs.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
AJL HomePage http://www.JewishLibraries.org
--
Hasafran mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran
__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL)
==================================
Submissions for Ha-Safran, send to:
[email protected]
To join Ha-Safran, update or change your subscription, etc. - click here: 
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran
Questions, problems, complaints, compliments send to: [email protected]
Ha-Safran Archives:
Current:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.service.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
Earlier Listserver:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.acs.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
AJL HomePage http://www.JewishLibraries.org
--
Hasafran mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran

Reply via email to