Are You Listening Rabbi Low
|
| Price: |
40 new or used available from $0.36
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1351528 in Books
- Published on: 1988-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 404 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Sigmund Franz Isadore Schultz, the hero of this crass, unfunny comic novel by the author of The Ginger Man , is a caricature without a single redeeming feature. The suddenly wealthy producer of the lowbrow London revue Kiss It, Don't Hold It, It's Too Hot , Schultz is an unabashed vulgarian who crashes through upper-crust British society with the finesse of a rutting bull. Entranced by his genital and excretory functions, almost literally self-castrating, bombastically horny, socially and verbally inept and determined not to lose a penny of profit, Schultz will set off alarm bells in more than a few readers; one character's comment that "anti-Semitism was invented because of people like you" seems designed to defuse accusations that the rest of the book encourages. In prose that's repetitive, garbled and bereft of wit, Schultz rambles on about his obsessions and occasionally prays to his ancestor, the late rabbi of the title, for guidance. Only the most determined reader will stick around to learn whether Schultz vanquishes the snobs and shrews battling against him. Donleavy's first novel in five years is a stunning disappointment.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Customer Reviews
A Damn Fine Book
This is a damn fine book. Yes, it beats you about the head and face with its raw humor, which is relentless, and yes the lead character is beyond redemption, as if that matters. And yes, the plot is just one impossible pickle after another for this poor guy! And all of his own creation. But the point of the book is not anti-semitism (as has been suggested in the review up top here on amazon), it's the story of a man who, like all Donleavy characters, is inexorably caught between high aspirations and low desires, and knows it.
To top it off, the patented Donleavy prose is in fine form as always.


