Tales of the Hasidim (The Early Masters / The Later Masters)

by Martin Buber

Paperback, 1991

Status

Available

Call number

801.4 BUB

Publication

Schocken (1991), 352 pages

Description

This new paperback edition brings together volumes one and two of Buber's classic work Takes of the Hasidim, with a new foreword by Chaim Potok. Martin Buber devoted forty years of his life to collecting and retelling the legends of Hasidim. "Nowhere in the last centuries," wrote Buber in Hasidim and Modern Man, "has the soul-force of Judaism so manifested itself as in Hasidim... Without an iota being altered in the law, in the ritual, in the traditional life-norms, the long-accustomed arose in a fresh light and meaning." These marvelous tales--terse, vigorous, often cryptic--are the true texts of Hasidim. The hasidic masters, of whom these tales are told, are full-bodied personalities, yet their lives seem almost symbolic. Through them is expressed the intensity and holy joy whereby God becomes visible in everything.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member raizel
The volume contains two books: The Early Masters and The Later Masters and a new foreword by Chaim Potok. The page numbers start over with Book Two. Each book has an introduction, notes, glossary, and index. The first has a selected bibliography and the second a genealogy of the Hasidic masters and
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an alphabetical index to the genealogy.

Book Two includes what seems like an original version of I.L. Peretz's "Even Higher," called "Lamentations at Midnight" (p. 87) about Rabbi Moshe Leib of Sasov. It is interesting to compare the two stories.
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Original language

English

Physical description

352 p.; 7.96 inches

ISBN

9780805209952

Local notes

Donated by Julie Martinez

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