This is Minnie Bloch's story, as told in her twilight yearsover coffee in a shopping mall or during supper served in her apartmentto her friends Mrs. Pinsker and Mrs. Stellberg. Mostly it is about Manny, her son Emmanuel, who was a little boy when his father was killed while selling vegetables from a cart on the Lower East Side on a Sabbath. She tells how Manny's hair turned white in a single afternoon in his 17th year, when he heard his father's voice speak from a white bird flying over the tenement rooftops.
About how he went to Cincinnati to study to be a rabbi, then married the daughter of his benefactor. She tells her friends, who are mothers and grandmothers too and so can understand, how her daughter-in-law lost her private sorrow in the emptiness of drink, and how Manny found some happiness with Florette, a survivor of the Holocaust. Minnie's eyesight fails over the years she tells her tale until in the end, nearly blind, she lies in a nursing home, explaining her granddaughter Sarah's confusion when Manny left the congregation for business and how Sarah's resentment grew as her father's fortunes did, and finally was the cause of his downfall. Minnie's story overflows with compassion and a profound sadness.
Told in language that is earthy, lyrical and never false, it is as deep and powerful and lasting as her wisdom. Cheuse is literary critic for National Public Radio's All Things Considered and the author of The Bohemians.
Fueled by his daughter's embittered radical politics. In a series of conversations over many years with her friends Mrs. Pinsker and Mrs. Stellberg, Minnie describes how teenage Manny was visited by a pigeon who seemed to speak with his dead father's voice, promising both blessedness and fortune— and how Manny's life became one long battle between the two warring directions.
"A bitter, brilliant series of songs, heartless and tender, with a magical displacement of time and a language that rattles us and reminds us how close art and chaos really are."