Fiction
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1 online resource (1 audio file (39 min.)) : digital
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Read by Theodore Bikel
Widely considered one of Isaac Bashevis Singer's most notable works of short fiction, "Gimpel the Fool" was originally written in Yiddish. It was later translated into English by Saul Bellow and appeared in the 1953 edition of Partisan Review. The story, a parable, tells of a foolish, unlucky baker named Gimpel, who is constantly tricked and heckled by other villagers. His follies ultimately reveal a moral lesson. "Sparkling and triumphant, Isaac Bashevis Singer's stories are filled with wonder, gratitude, humor, irony, and a wry eroticism that manages to exalt the pleasures of the flesh and the soul at the same time." "Singer is a genius. He has total command of his imagined world."
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