Mazel

by Rebecca Goldstein

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

F GOL

Collection

Publication

Penguin Books (1996), Paperback, 368 pages

Description

Mazel means luck in Yiddish, and luck is the guiding force in this magical and mesmerizing novel that spans three generations. Sasha Saunders is the daughter of a Polish rabbi who abandons the shtetl and wins renown as a Yiddish actress in Warsaw and New York. Her daughter Chloe becomes a professor of classics at Columbia. Chloe's daughter Phoebe grows up to become a mathematician who is drawn to traditional Judaism and the sort of domestic life her mother and grandmother rejected.

Barcode

2731

Awards

National Jewish Book Award (Winner — Fiction — 1995)

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member kattepusen
This is the 4th book I have read of Rebecca goldstien, and this was my 2nd favorite (after the superb Mind-Body Problem). I liked the "generational" aspect where we follow Sasha (Sorel) from early childhood in a Schluftchev shtetl to present day USA where she has a grown daughter (Chloe) and a
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granddaughter just about to get married (Phoebe). I must admit I enjoyed the early childhood and early adult descriptions of Sasha the best - here there is a rich sense of storytelling and the human characterizations are gripping and vivid. Sasha evetually rejects and leaves behind the old-fashioned Jewish ways of the shtetl and becomes a great stage actress and part of the Jewish intellectual life ("The Enlightenment") in prewar Warsaw. The story in the present is also good, but I thought Sasha's antics were described with too much cliche and suffered a bit from the "feminine-writer syndrome". In addition, the daughter and granddaughter stay very one-dimensional. Mazel means LUCK in Yiddish, and this book very successfully plays with its meaning throughout someone's life. Finally, Phoebe's decision about going back to traditional Jewish ways is one of the best contrasts in the story...perfectly unimaginable and understandable at the same time!
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LibraryThing member yaffa
Descriptions of this novel make it sound like it is about 3 generations of women. It is really only about the grandmother with a bit about the daughter and granddaughter serving as bookends to the story.

That being said it is a very interesting story. Though some of it may be lost on people without
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a Jewish / Yiddish background it deals with universal themes of choices people make about how the universe works and being religious or not.

Like other books by the author there are philosophical ideas interwoven throughout the story.
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ISBN

0140239057 / 9780140239058
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