Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... The Yiddish Policemen's Union (original 2007; edition 2007)by Michael Chabon (Author)
Work InformationThe Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon (2007)
Best Dystopias (70) » 64 more Jewish Books (19) Nebula Award (6) Favourite Books (538) Best Crime Fiction (69) Best Noir Fiction (16) Urban Fiction (5) Top Five Books of 2013 (1,277) Murder Mysteries (8) Magic Realism (119) Books Read in 2019 (490) Top Five Books of 2019 (243) Top Five Books of 2018 (789) Great Audiobooks (23) Books Read in 2007 (11) Books Read in 2013 (359) Books Read in 2017 (1,442) Books Read in 2016 (4,163) Overdue Podcast (287) Detective Stories (81) Books About Murder (137) Emily's Reviews (1) USA Road Trip (17) Reading 2008 (3) Audio Books (1) Protagonists - Men (22) Speculative Fiction (33) Unread books (511) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I would call this urban fantasy only by the skin of it's teeth. In fact, sci-fi / mystery might be most appropriate. Alternate reality very like this, except that it takes in a Jewish settlement, a carved out area of Alaska, that is going to "revert" to Alaska in the coming year. More about identity and homelands. ( ) Chabon has an amazing ability to fully flesh a character in just a few short paragraphs. Technically an SF novel because it is set in an alternate present, The Yiddish Policeman's Union has more in common with hard boiled detective fiction. The alcoholic protagonist is tragic in his suicidal, self-redemptive pursuit of an apparent dead-end case (which, of course, turns out to be much more complex than previously believed). This is a slow read, but a rich one. The Yiddish Policemen's Union takes place in an alternate history when the Germans do not surrender the Second Great War for another four years past reality and President Kennedy is not assassinated from the grassy knoll. In this alternate history Kennedy ends up marrying Marilyn Monroe (of course he does). Sitka, Alaska is the site of a federally mandated safe refugee location for European Jews. The area was created at the height of World War II and sixty years later, the safe haven still exists. Only, now Alaska wants their territory back. The plot is great, but the characters of The Yiddish Policemen's Union are what makes the novel hum. Chabon's characters exude personality. To name a few: Meyer Landsman, the main protagonist, was a character I loved. This flawed policeman whose life is a mess cannot let go of one particular cold case, the murder of a drug addled chess prodigy and supposed messiah. Landsman is supervised by his ex-wife, Bina and she has ordered the force to abandon all cold cases now that the safe haven for refugees is being dismantled. Berko Shemets, his partner is half Jewish, half Tlingit and all intimidation. It took a while for me to get into, and I do kind of feel bad saying it, but the Yiddish was an obstacle.. I just didn't feel at home. But a stretch is good, right? Once I got the characters voices established in my head, I really enjoyed the story and think it's one of the most creative books I've read in a long time.
Chabon is a spectacular writer. He does a witty turn reinventing Yiddish for the modern Alaskan Jews - of course the lingua franca of Jews without an Israel - just a little of which I, with only faintly remembered childhood Yiddish, could grasp. A mobile phone is a shoyfer (perhaps because, like the ram's horn, it calls you), a gun is a sholem (a Yiddish version of a Peacemaker?). Chabon is a language magician, turning everything into something else just for the delight of playing tricks with words. He takes the wry, underbelly vision of the ordinary that the best of noir fiction offers and ratchets it up to the limit. Nothing is allowed to be itself; all people and events are observed as an echo of something else. Voices are like "an onion rolling in a bucket", or rusty forks falling. An approaching motorcycle is "a heavy wrench clanging against a cold cement floor. The flatulence of a burst balloon streaking across the living room and knocking over a lamp." Chabon's ornate prose makes Chandler's fruity observations of the world look quite plain. Nothing is described as just the way it is. Nothing is let be. He writes like a dream and has you laughing out loud, applauding the fun he has with language and the way he takes the task of a writer and runs delighted rings around it. For the most part, Chabon's writing serves the knotted mystery that is being unravelled, but there is eventually a point where it begins to weary the mind, where the elaborations of things get in the way of the things themselves and the narrative gets sucked under by style. The compulsory paragraph of Byzantine physical description whenever another character arrives on the scene starts to seem an irritating interlude; another over-reaching cadenza. Though it seems churlish to complain about such a vivid talent, a little less would have been enough already. Itās obvious that the creation of this strange, vibrant, unreal world is Chabonās idea of heaven. He seems happy here, almost giddy, high on the imaginative freedom that has always been the most cherished value in his fiction. Some of the pleasures of The Yiddish Policemenās Union are, actually, distinctly Dan Brownāish. Mr. Chabon often ends chapters with cliffhangers that might be tiresome in the hands of a lesser writer (say, Dan Brown). Here, theyāre over-the-top suspenseful, savory and delicious. More important, Mr. Chabon has so thoroughly conjured the fictional world of Sitka ā its history, culture, geography, its incestuous and byzantine political and sectarian divisions ā that the reader comes to take its existence for granted. By the end of the book, we feel we know this chilly piece of northern real estate, where Yiddish is the language of choice, the same way we feel we have come to know Meyer Landsman ā this āsecular policemanā who has learned to sail ādouble-hulled against tragedy,ā ever wary of āthe hairline fissures, the little freaks of torqueā that can topple a boat in the shallows. This novel makes you think, but it is an ordeal to read. The problem: Chabon has mixed two very dark story lines that jar the reader. There is the real tragedy of Sitka's wandering Jews, and then there is the faux bleakness of the noir genre with its posturing attitude. The central character comes across as a Jewish Humphrey Bogart wannabe, not a three-dimensional character who can shoulder a 400-plus-page novel about exile, fanatics and longing. Is contained inIs abridged inAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
In a world in which Alaska, rather than Israel, has become the homeland for the Jews following World War II, Detective Meyer Landsman and his half-Tlingit partner Berko investigate the death of a heroin-addled chess prodigy. No library descriptions found.
|
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |