Rabbineren tror på heldet

by Harry Kemelman

Paper Book, 1985

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Library's review

USA, Massachusetts, Barnard's Crossing, ca 1964
Rabbineren David Small, 40 år gammel og gift med Miriam, afviser at medvirke til bryllup mellem den nye synagodeforstander Howard Magnusons datter og ikke-jøden John Scofield. En politisk muddervender bliver kørt ned af en flugtbillist.

Nydelig
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skildring af et lille samfund
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Publication

[Kbh.] : Samleren, cop. 1985.

Description

An interfaith wedding, local politics, and a lethal hit-and-run case keep Rabbi Small busy in this mystery in the New York Times-bestselling series. Since becoming the rabbi at the synagogue in Barnard's Crossing, Massachusetts, David Small has seen his congregation through a fair share of unholy bickering and corruption. So when millionaire Howard Magnuson is elected president of the synagogue, the rabbi isn't surprised that Magnuson wants to bring corporate efficiency to the temple--at the expense of religious tradition. Conflict flares when Rabbi Small refuses, on the basis of temple rules, to officiate the interfaith wedding of Magnuson's daughter to a non-Jewish Boston politician, and the new president calls for the rabbi's dismissal.   When another player in Boston politics is killed in a hit-and-run accident and the police suspect a Jewish college student, Rabbi Small fears the undergrad might have been set up--and that Magnuson is involved. The young man's innocence and the future of the temple depend on Rabbi Small solving the case with his signature wit and Judaic wisdom.  … (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member francesanngray
entertaining read, more about politics than about solving a mystery
LibraryThing member BonnieJune54
[Someday the Rabbi will Leave] I liked the look at small town politics in this one. There is also young women tentatively finding their way away from their mom's traditional roles.
LibraryThing member AliceAnna
Either this one wasn't as good as I remembered the others to be or I've outgrown his appeal. I think I enjoyed learning more about Judaism when I first read these 20+ years ago, but I just found this to be so dated and the rabbi to be such an insufferable pompous jerk in this one that I really
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didn't enjoy it.
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LibraryThing member ritaer
political dirty tricks have an unexpected effect on Rabbi Small's career

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

167 p.; 22.3 cm

ISBN

8756807856 / 9788756807852

Local notes

Omslag: John Ovesen
Omslaget er bare forfatter og titel sat som tekst
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi
Oversat fra amerikansk "Someday the Rabbi will leave" af Christy Grandjean
David Small, bind 8

Pages

167

Library's rating

Rating

½ (45 ratings; 3.7)

DDC/MDS

813.54
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