Collected Stories Vol. 2
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By the time Isaac Bashevis Singer published the three short-story
collections gathered in this Library of America volume--A Friend of
Kafka (1970), A Crown of Feathers (1973), and Passions (1975)--he
had made his home in America for nearly four decades. Earning his
living as a columnist for the Yiddish newspaper Forverts (The
Jewish Daily Forward), he had risen from nearly complete anonymity
outside of his Yiddish readership to international celebrity as
",the last of the great Yiddish fiction writers,", as Anzia
Yzierska once called him. Awarded prizes, feted in the United
States and abroad, eagerly sought for lectures and interviews, he
had brought about this remarkable transformation primarily though
the translation of his stories. Often collaborating with his
translators, Singer intended the English version of his stories to
be regarded not as diminished approximations of his Yiddish stories
but as works shaped by the author in the language of his adopted
homeland. The sixty-five stories in Collected Stories: A Friend of
Kafka to Passions--the second of three volumes--reflect Singer's
origins in Poland and his long exile in America. Although he
continued to write tales drawing on Jewish folk traditions and
supernaturalism, many of his stories from the late 1960s and early
1970s take place in the United States, as Singer explored the
psychic devastation wrought by the Nazi genocide on Holocaust
survivors (",The Cafeteria",), evoked the fragility of transplanted
forms of Jewish life and belief (",The Cabalist of East
Broadway",), and reflected on the spiritual hazards of worldly
success in America (",Old Love",). Stories such as ",A Day in Coney
Island,", ",A Tutor in the Village,", and ",The Son",--based on
Singer's reunion with his son Israel Zamir after a twenty-year
separation--show Singer blurring the line between autobiography and
fiction, a tendency that marks much of his later writing. LIBRARY
OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization
founded in 1979 to preserve our nation's literary heritage by
publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America's best and
most significant writing. The Library of America series includes
more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average
1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and
ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that
will last for centuries.