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Tales of Unkosher Souls - by David Margolis (Paperback)

Tales of Unkosher Souls - by  David Margolis (Paperback)
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Last Price: 8.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>This is an assortment of short stories about Jewish people who want to believe in a God but like many of us, they just can't take that leap of faith. As they stumble through their lives making one mistake after another, they wonder if their souls will reach heaven-if such a place exists. And then what? In "God's Sabbatical," a poor autistic soul arrives in the afterworld and is bunked in a five by five-inch cubicle. He's told that God is on vacation, and there's an inexperienced bureaucrat running the place. In another story, "Ruthie the Dinosaur Eats the Forbidden Fruit" a nurturing mamasaur (an unknown species) repents, I'm honestly sorry for my mistake, but after all, it was only a piece of fruit and not so good-tasting. In the last story, a talking raven proclaims that Death isn't fair. All the stories are imbued with an ironic sense of humor that I inherited from my grandfather who left the shtetl when he was 18 years old. This book will have a wide audience, anyone who enjoyed "Fiddler on the Roof," or actually fiddled on a roof, will want to read this book.</p><p><br></p><p>Tales of Unkosher Souls has received a Kirkus starred review!</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Book Review: </p><p><br></p><p>"KIRKUS STARRED REVIEW FOR TALES OF UNKOSHER SOULS FEB 2021 Uneasy Jewish people wrestle with their sins in these tragicomic stories. Margolis' tales mostly explore life in Russian shtetls and the tarnished "Promised Land" of America, as well as souls journeying from life to afterlife, with improbable swerves along the way. In "Moshko's Lovers," a rabbi's daughter rejects a village cobbler because he had a vision of eating nonkosher food during a previous incarnation as a courtier to Henry VIII; in "The Dybbuk of Brooklyn," a New York City liquor salesman pays a rabbi to exorcise a wandering spirit who has taken up residence in him and shouts obnoxious comments; and in "Lilith's Daughter," a St. Louis man obtains a female golem who changes from docile servant to an independent woman with feminist beliefs. The soul of a poor man waits centuries to enter heaven, only to discover the price of celestial efficiency in "God's Sabbatical"; an angel tells a rabbi to promote a local shepherd as the Messiah, which makes his congregation giddy with delight until the Chosen One makes unpleasant demands in "Two Goats and a Dog"; and in another story, a dinosaur in the Garden of Eden eats the forbidden fruit along with Adam and Eve and watches the punishment unfold. Margolis' fiction mixes magical realism with a rich vein of Jewish humor, featuring shady rabbis, plenty of kvetching ("He just sits there, staring at his plate as if he might find a wife there, and suddenly I'm supposed to marry him?"), and a prosaic approach to ethics that extends into divine bureaucracy ("Well, you stole that bag of candy from Kaminski when you were a kid, and then there were the seventeen apples and eight pears that you pilfered from Goldstein's fruit stand....But that's not enough to get you into Hell"). But underneath, there's a tenderness that makes the author's funny, ironic view of ordinary life feel luminous, as well, as when a man who lost his wife to cholera calls her "the greatest of angels...who would listen to all that a talkative Jewish man had to say even when he becomes boring." Raucously entertaining yarns whose wry wit carries a subtle moral resonance." -- KIRKUS INDIE REVIEW</p><br>

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