שאָטנס בײַם האָדסאָן
This four-volume collection of translations from the original serialized story is long and covers many themes, dramas, and philosophical ideas. The writing is fantastic and powerful. The survivors' recounting their first-person perspectives of the Holocaust and the subsequent Stalinist rampages made me cry. The disappointment due to the excessive length of the work is unfortunate, as the slices of life for these refugees are well-presented. However, the collection provides too much of a good thing.
The narrative follows a circle of Jewish refugees in New York City during the late 1940s as they grapple with their lost faith and the trauma of the past. The central figure, Boris Makaver, struggles to maintain his religious traditions while his daughter and friends navigate messy affairs, political disillusionment, and the haunting memories of post-Holocaust pogroms. These characters represent a fractured society trying to rebuild itself in the shadow of unimaginable loss while confronting the modern world's moral complexities.
I do not recommend this specific collection. The individual observations are moving, but the overall length makes the experience difficult to endure.
3/5 Stars.

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