Gimpel der Narr. Ausgewählte Erzählungen.

by Isaac Bashevis Singer

Paperback, 1982

Status

Available

Publication

Rowohlt Tb. (1982)

Description

Isaac Bashevis Singer' s first collection of stories, "Gimpel the Fool," is a landmark work that has attracted international acclaim since it was first published in 1957. In Saul Bellow' s masterly translation, the title story follows the exploits of Gimpel, an ingenuous baker who is universally deceived but who declines to retaliate against his tormentors. Gimpel and the protagonists of the other stories in this volume all inhabit the distinctive pre- World War II ghettos of Poland and, beyond that, the larger world created by Singer' s unforgettable prose.

User reviews

LibraryThing member TurtleBoy
An early anthology of Singer's work, this volume is characteristically wonderful. There is truth to Singer's writing, and simplicity. His characters are real, even those as unreal as imps and dybbukim. There is true, unfettered joy in works like that that bears this name ("Joy," the seventh story
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of this volume). Even from the wreckage of war-torn villages, even from the clutches of Satan himself, Singer manages to snatch glimmerings of hope and peace and love.

My favorite from this collection is "The little shoemakers," a short saga of several generations of cobblers in a small Polish village. The story focuses its attention on the symbolically-named Abba, the last of the line to live out much of his life in Poland before emigrating to America. So vivid, the descriptions of his town, the portrait of his home. So real, his hands, his work, his world. So well do we feel we know poor Abba that we cry when his home is destroyed, his life uprooted, he and his small satchel of tools carried across the sea to begin a new life late in his appointed years. "Oh Lord, Judele!"

Absent from this collection were Singer's tales of mid-century New York, a fare that offers delicious variety in many of his other collections of short prose. This absence is perhaps the volume's only drawback. Otherwise, read, rejoice!
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LibraryThing member reuchlin
my omnibus Bashevis Singer does not include 'The Mirror' (from this volume) which (on reflection) is one of his best tales
LibraryThing member ben_a
Reading through translation, according to Yehudit Hendel, resembles kissing the bride through the veil. Perhaps this explains why Singer has not done much for me. I have read the first two -- "Gimpel the Fool" and "The Man from Crakow" and neither screamed "Nobel Prize." (2.9.08)

OK, just read "The
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Mirror" as well. Again, no fireworks. Time to stop. (2.11.08)
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LibraryThing member kidzdoc
Isaac Bashevis Singer was born to a Hasidic rabbi and his wife in a small village near Warsaw in 1904, and he lived in poverty for most of his childhood and young adult life. He studied the Talmud formally, read literature and philosophy in his spare time, and worked as a proofreader, reviewer and
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short story writer in the mid-1920s, aided by his older brother Israel Joshua Singer, who became a noted journalist and novelist. He emigrated to New York in 1935, following his brother who had emigrated there three years previously. He continued to write short stories and novels, always in Yiddish initially, which were later revised and translated into English. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1978.

Gimpel the Fool: And Other Stories (1953) was the first collection of Singer's short stories published in English in the United States. It is one of four books included in the Library of America's Collected Stories: Gimpel the Fool to The Letter Writer.

The stories are set in shtetls. small towns with large Jewish populations, in late 19th century Poland. They are told as folk tales involving villagers, mainly of whom are led to sin by a variety of devils and demons, who take advantage of the characters' weaknesses and greed to lead them astray. The first story, "Gimpel the Fool", is the best in this collection, involving a simple man who is repeatedly tricked and tortured by his fellow villagers and wife, but ultimately has the last word, as he retains his belief in the God and the capacity of goodness in man. Other stories are similarly themed, in that those who follow a path of truth and good will ultimately be rewarded, whereas those consumed by greed or desired will be easily tricked by demons, who assume a variety of disguises, and will meet fates worse than death.

The stories are quite rich, humorous and witty without being overly moralistic, and the book was a most enjoyable read.
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LibraryThing member KevinTexas
Gimpel the Fool, the collection, is not one of my favorite Singer works. That's why I am giving it the rating I am. In truth, I would choose it over many books I've rated higher. At some point though, a measure of objectivity should be allowed in. Right, Gimpel? Anyway, what follows is my current
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view in regard to the character of Gimpel. There is the potential below, of course, for spoilers to the story.

Why is Gimpel a fool?

Gimpel is "easy to take in." Gimpel is taken in, even, by statements he suspects to be false. A fool's response to hearing the news of his parents rising from the grave? "To tell the truth, I knew nothing of the sort had happened, but all the same, as folks were talking, I threw on my wool vest and went out." It's not hope that drives him out - he says as much. He knows his parents aren't there. He offers two reasons: 1) anything is possible, and 2) those who told him would be upset if he didn't pretend at least to believe them. I think Gimpel is holding something back. He may not realize it himself. Is it possible the primary reason for Gimpel acting the fool is that he does not want to acknowledge the cruelty that surrounds human existence? Is it a case, then, of opting for illusion rather than reality?

Well, anything is possible. Life goes on. Indignities mount. El Diablo appears. Not in a sulfuric cloud, but atop processed powdery foodstuff bags that are the heart of Gimpel's economic well-being is the temptation whispered. Gimpel? Gimpel goes along with everything. The apparition of his wife next appears. Gimpel is persuaded to undo that which the devil almost made him do. I mean, is the cup half-empty or half-full at this point? Gimpel please stop being rolled.

Gimpel the wanderer goes from town to town comforted in the knowledge "No doubt the world is entirely an imaginary world, but it is only once removed from the true world." What's that? I see him still running away from the problem; still acting on things he believes to be untrue; still reaching for the wool vest while undertaking his latest errand. Is there any reason why we should take Gimpel's word for anything?

So, is Gimpel a fool at story's end?

I keep thinking to Singer's Author's Note to The Penitent, written many years after this story, how it mentions the following: "If I were able to picket the Almighty, I would carry a sign with the slogan UNFAIR TO LIFE!" He wouldn't find Gimpel on that picket line. And that's why Gimpel, to this reader, remains the fool.
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LibraryThing member kant1066
“Gimpel the Fool and Other Stories” was originally published in 1953, and contains ten short stories rife with Singer’s unique fictional voice – full of meditations on mortality, good, and evil, Jewish mythology, and an ability to communicate truths in the folksy, simple yet extraordinarily
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sophisticated way that characterizes these parabolic stories. Singer’s protagonists live in the Old World in every sense - a world inhabited with dybbuks, qlippoth, and golem who are every bit as real as anyone else. They are not disembodied spirits in “the world beyond.” They quite literally live in your mirror (see “The Mirror”) and come to talk to you after they have died.

In the title story, and maybe one of the more endearing, Gimpel, a baker from Frampol, openly declares in the opening lines “I am Gimpel the Fool. I don’t think myself a fool. On the contrary. But that’s what folks call me.” His innocence and simplicity almost set him up for the reader to expect something more sinister, but his child-like nature abides. Despite marrying a woman who shamelessly cuckolds him time and time and time again, he seems to have a preternatural ability for forgiveness and acceptance. One night, a Spirit of Evil visits him in his sleep and tempts him to deceive the world in the same way that it continues to deceive him. He asks how, and the Spirit responds “you might accumulate a bucket of urine every day and at night pour it into the dough. Let the sages of Frampol eat filth,” and urges him not to believe in God. The spirit of his wife visits him and warns him that just because she was false to him doesn’t mean that everything he’s learned is false. Gimpel is a poignant figure, but one whose goodness consigns him to what others think is foolishness for his entire life.

Singer the parabolist is at his height “The Gentleman from Cracow” wherein a man descends upon Frampol seemingly able to solve many of the city’s problems with his tremendous generosity and wealth. The only man trying to brook his influence on the townspeople of Frampol is old Rabbi Ozer, who keeps warning that he is a satanic influence. With such a heavy-handed theme, Singer does the seemingly impossible here: telling a moralistic tale without taking a cudgel to the reader’s head in order to communicate his message. This might be one of my favorite stories in the collection because its tone has so much in common with many of the others. It is a clearly articulated, well-defined fable that leaves enough room for ambiguity to entice the intelligent reader to visit it more than once.

After this and a couple of other experiences with short stories this year, I think I could reconsider what I think of them. Both this and Angela Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories” are two of the best books I’ve read in the last year. I was in the bookstore the other day and bought “In My Father’s Court,” an autobiographical volume about Singer’s rebellious childhood. These stories more than anything else struck me as the stories of a rebel; the characters are overly credulous yet smart, and deeply religious but speculative and doubting. If it’s anything like these stories, I can’t wait.
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Language

Original language

German

Original publication date

1953

ISBN

3499150115 / 9783499150111
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