From Publishers Weekly
When Malamud died in 1986, he left the first draft of a novel and 16 uncollected stories, 10 published in literary magazines, the remaining six among his papers. Collected here, they provide an excellent overview of his career. Most of the stories focus on tired, bewildered, vulnerable men (many of them Jewish, another form of alienation) trying to make sense of an uncongenial world. Among those written in the last years of his life are some that can rank with his best. "Zora's Noise" concerns a second wife who hears mysterious celestial sounds, and her cellist husband, who finally understands their significance. A splendid example of Malamud's mingling of the fantastical and the real, it resonates with wisdom and compassionate understanding. "An Exorcism" is a story within a story about a lame, lonely writer betrayed by his protege. The unfinished novel, The People , is a strange and wonderful adventure story, whose protagonist, a greenhorn emigre peddler, Yozip Bloom, becomes chief of an Indian tribe expelled from their lands by duplicitous white men. Beginning as a funny western, it gradually segues into a dark tale of perfidy and misery; his outline shows, however, that Malamud intended to conclude it on an affirmative note. Valuable both for its chronological span and for the genuine reading pleasure it affords, this is a must-have volume for anyone who treasures the work of one of the century's most talented writers.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
This work brings out Malamud's final, unfinished novel, The People , together with 14 uncollected stories, written from the 1940s to the author's death in 1986. The People is a wry and unsettling story of a Jewish immigrant's adoption by a 19th-century Native American tribe and their struggle to survive the expansionist and genocidal practices of the U.S. government. Though less polished than his other published work, it nevertheless represents an attempt to probe the ways in which the "promise" of America was predicated upon the demise of its native people. The stories, though diverse, deal in different ways with the issue of ties that bind: family, marriage, and group loyalties versus individual dreams and desires. This is a significant addition to Malamud's singular work. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 9/1/89.
- Deborah Gussman, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, N.J.Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.