Dear Colleagues and Friends,


I'm delighted to announce the publication of my debut collection of short
stories, *Prodigal Children in the House of G-d*. The book is written in
English and includes Hebrew and Yiddish terms, which are defined in a
glossary. It is available in paperback and e-book formats. Please find
below advance praise, links to earlier versions of stories published in
literary journals, a citation, ways of purchasing the book, and a brief bio.



Thank you for your interest and support.



All my best,

Yermiyahu Ahron





Advance Praise for *Prodigal Children in the House of G-d*



Yermiyahu Ahron Taub's collection, *Prodigal Children in the House of G-d*,
is cleaved down the middle—five stories of daughters, five of sons—then
sewn together by the stories themselves, which intertwine in surprising and
delightful ways as characters jump from story to story and get bruised or
healed in the process.  Taub is a brave, exacting, and large-hearted writer
who cares deeply about his characters as they question the lives they have
inherited or chosen, and he passes no judgment on saints and sinners
alike.  Whether their ghetto is ultra-Orthodox, gay or small-town America,
Taub's characters are on quests that stretch over lifetimes and are
riveting to watch.



—Evan Fallenberg, author of *The Parting Gift*



Not all poets can also write prose, but Yermiyahu Ahron Taub certainly can.
In a mere dozen pages or so, his story “Lettering and the Art of Living”
succeeds in capturing a woman’s entire lifetime, and by evoking many of her
memories, feelings, and even her historical context, he awards dignity to
this humble individual’s solitary, not fully-lived life. “Lettering and the
Art of Living,” infused with a poet’s sensibility and sensitivity, is an
accomplished and moving story.”


—Nora Gold, author of *The Dead Man, Fields of Exile, *and* Marrow*; and
Editor of *Jewish Fiction .net*



Each story in Yermiyahu Ahron Taub’s *Prodigal Children in the House
of G-d* renders
an elegant portrait of a lonely soul confronting demands of ultra-Orthodox
or other conservative tradition.  Simmering with inner resistance, these
characters—lesbian, hetero, gay—struggle to shape their birthrights on
their own terms.  Taub offers a wealth of sensitive insights into minds and
hearts rarely depicted on the page.



—Daniel M. Jaffe, author of *The Genealogy of Understanding *and* Jewish
Gentle and Other Stories of Gay-Jewish Living*



Taub's story collection addresses the gaps in understanding and faith
between parents and children in a vivid, tender, and bittersweet way.
People, mostly young, find themselves suddenly at odds with their previous
reality, often through no fault of their own, suffering the painful fallout
from what Heinrich von Kleist called "the imperfection inherent in the
order of the world."  And yet Taub's characters bring a quiet courage to
their situations: the mother of a banished gay son reconnects with him
before his death, a girl whose rabbi father has viciously dismembered her
Barbies is comforted by her brother, a young girl dreams the impossible
dream of becoming a scholar of the Torah.  These stories are grounded in
fine detail from the fussy furnishings of a boarding house to a
polka-dotted half-veil hat that begins a deep friendship.  This collection
is at once elegiac and edgy, wise and witty, and I am certain this will be
the most rewarding story collection I will read this year.



—Margaret Meyers, author of *Dislocation*



*Prodigal Children in the House of G-d* is a beautifully written, finely
detailed, big-hearted, generous, intimate story collection full of
fascinating daughters and sons who will stay with this reader for a long
time to come. Make yourself a big pot of tea, sink down into a comfortable
chair, and turn off all your devices. This is a book to spend time with,
pay attention to, savor, and enjoy.

—Lesléa Newman, author of *A Letter to Harvey Milk*



The prodigal children in Yermiyahu Ahron Taub’s elegant and lovely new
collection are each—to paraphrase a famous Talmudic dictum—a fully
individual and necessary world. They are also worlds in exile, finding
dignity in often modest but gratefully free lives achieved at enormous
cost. As we come to know more and more of them, they form a universe that
moves us to the core. Though Taub’s background may make us assume the
influence of the great Yiddish writers, his characters seem more like those
in the works of Mavis Gallant or Virginia Woolf had they been born into a
different tradition.


 —Aryeh Lev Stollman, author of *The Far Euphrates* and *The Illuminated
Soul*





Read or Listen to Earlier Versions of Stories in the Collection.


"Angel of the Underworld" in *Jewrotica
<http://jewrotica.org/2016/05/angel-of-the-underworld/>*



 "Flowers for Madame" in *SecondHand Stories Podcast
<http://www.secondhandpodcast.com/episodes/episode-13-lavender-flowers-for-madame>*
(read
by the author)




"Lettering and the Art of Living" in *Jewish Fiction .net
<https://www.jewishfiction.net/index.php/publisher/articleview/frmArticleID/506>*




 "Undressing After Sinai" in *The Jewish Literary Journal
<http://jewishliteraryjournal.com/fiction/undressing-after-sinai/>*



Taub, Yermiyahu Ahron. *Prodigal Children in the House of G-d: Stories*.
London: Austin Macauley, 2018. ISBN: 9781788231572 (Paperback); ISBN:
9781788231589 (E-Book). 179 pages.





*Prodigal Children in the House of G-d *is available for purchase from
Austin  <http://www.austinmacauley.com/book/prodigal-children-house-g-d>
Macauley <http://www.austinmacauley.com/book/prodigal-children-house-g-d> as
well as Amazon
<https://www.amazon.com/Prodigal-Children-House-Yermiyahu-Ahron/dp/1788231570/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1525004316&sr=8-1&keywords=yermiyahu+taub>
, Barnes and Noble
<https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/prodigal-children-in-the-house-of-g-d-yermiyahu-ahron-taub/1128526550?ean=9781788231572>,
and other booksellers.





Bio



Yermiyahu Ahron Taub <https://yataubdotnet.wordpress.com/> is the author of
the short story collection *Prodigal Children in the House of G-d* and six
books of poetry, including *A moyz tsvishn vakldike volkn-kratsers:
geklibene Yidishe lider/A Mouse Among Tottering Skyscrapers: Selected
Yiddish Poems *(Library of Contemporary Yiddish Literature, 2017). In 2014,
Multikulti Project released *Tsugreytndik zikh tsu tantsn: naye Yidishe
lider/Preparing to Dance: New Yiddish songs*, a CD of nine of his Yiddish
poems set to music by Michał Górczyński. Taub was honored by the Museum of
Jewish Heritage as one of New York’s best emerging Jewish artists and has
been nominated four times for a Pushcart Prize and twice for a Best of the
Net award.  With Ellen Cassedy, he is the recipient of the 2012 Yiddish
Book Center Translation Prize for *Oedipus in Brooklyn and Other Stories* by
Blume Lempel (Mandel Vilar Press and Dryad Press, 2016). Taub's stories
have appeared or are forthcoming in *Hamilton Stone Review*, *Penshaft: New
Yiddish Writing*, *Typishly.com*, and *Verdad*, among other publications.
__
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