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Inside, Outside : A Novel

Inside, Outside : A Novel

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.53
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Author of Winds of War-A grand piece of storytelling.
Review: "Inside, Outside" comes as close to being an outright autobiography as Wouk is likely to write."

"Wouk demonstrates his ability to write with compassion about people both literary and historical, real and imaginary."

Wouk's 1985 saga is a social comedy of Jewish-American life reaching from New York to Jerusalem and spanning much of the 20th century.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Author of Winds of War-A grand piece of storytelling.
Review: "Inside, Outside" comes as close to being an outright autobiography as Wouk is likely to write."

"Wouk demonstrates his ability to write with compassion about people both literary and historical, real and imaginary."

Wouk's 1985 saga is a social comedy of Jewish-American life reaching from New York to Jerusalem and spanning much of the 20th century.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very funny and moving.
Review: A terrific story of the clash of immigrant and American cultures. Although Jewish in setting, this could be any of our immigrant ancestor's story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: from the back cover of the book
Review: Fascinating, funny, romantic, wise... This is a stunning exploration of the American Jewish experience - the heartfelt tale of every immigrant torn between the culture of his forefathers and the glorious temptations of a new land's dream. - A grand piece of storytelling-Boston Globe. Rich and compelling-The New York Times. Laugh until your side aches...Wipe away a tear...-Pittsburgh Press

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wouk lightens up in 1st novel following War and Remembrance
Review: Inside, Outside is a sometimes rambling but ultimately engrossing story of a young man growing up in New York City in the 1920s and 1930s. Structured as the memoir of a functionary in the Nixon White House, the text cuts between "the present day" (the collapsing administration and the Israel-Egyptian war) and the narrator's reminisinces.

The story is told by Israel David Goodkind, now a high powered corporate and civil rights attorney, then favored son of a Bronx laundryman and his wife, "a rabbi's a daughter". Both his parents are devout jews, his grandfather a Talmudic scholar, and the book's title tells of I. David's split worlds as he struggles with the dubious rewards of assimilation.

The first hundred pages or so seem a bit unanchored, drifting in short chapters from his mother's upbringing to his father's childhood, from late night meetings with Nixon (never mentioned by name) to phone calls from his old childhood chum, the famed Jewish! writer Peter Quat (any resemblance to Philip Roth is purely intentional). But soon the story tightens both in the past as Goodkind leaves Columbia and takes work as a radio gagman, to the present, as Israel goes to war again. The last half is an engrossing read, and ultimately draws close parallels between the story of a young Jewish american and the future of the Jewish state.

If you like Wouk (especially if you have read his primer on the Jewish faith, This is My God) you will probably enjoy Inside, Outside. It's several degrees less instense than the harrowing War and Remembrance, but no less a hymn to Judaism at its core. It's also frequently amusing and often moving in its character portrayals.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: from the back cover of the book
Review: There's no such thing as a bad book by Herman Wouk, and the breadth of his writing is almost as vast as the depth. To think that one man wrote MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR, THE CAINE MUTINY, THIS IS MY GOD, THE WINDS OF WAR, WAR & REMEMBRANCE, DON'T STOP THE CARNIVAL plus a half dozen others simply boggles the imagination.

Along with DON'T STOP THE CARNIVAL, Wouk's funniest book, INSIDE, OUTSIDE is an easier read than most of the other topics he has tackled. Set in a recent decade, the title refers to the fact that in Jewish families, some people use one name at home, their Hebrew, "inside" name and the Anglicized version of that same name out in the big world. Along with the name chosen go two different and distinctive aspects of their personalities.

It seemed clear on reading INSIDE, OUTSIDE that the hero's sister, Lee, is the all-grown up version of Marjorie Morningstar. This is not Herman Wouk's most important book, far from it, but it is one of his easiest works to read. The story he has told, as always, is an interesting one. There is no such thing as a bad book when Mr. Wouk is the author.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wouk is superb
Review: There's no such thing as a bad book by Herman Wouk, and the breadth of his writing is almost as vast as the depth. To think that one man wrote MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR, THE CAINE MUTINY, THIS IS MY GOD, THE WINDS OF WAR, WAR & REMEMBRANCE, DON'T STOP THE CARNIVAL plus a half dozen others simply boggles the imagination.

Along with DON'T STOP THE CARNIVAL, Wouk's funniest book, INSIDE, OUTSIDE is an easier read than most of the other topics he has tackled. Set in a recent decade, the title refers to the fact that in Jewish families, some people use one name at home, their Hebrew, "inside" name and the Anglicized version of that same name out in the big world. Along with the name chosen go two different and distinctive aspects of their personalities.

It seemed clear on reading INSIDE, OUTSIDE that the hero's sister, Lee, is the all-grown up version of Marjorie Morningstar. This is not Herman Wouk's most important book, far from it, but it is one of his easiest works to read. The story he has told, as always, is an interesting one. There is no such thing as a bad book when Mr. Wouk is the author.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GREATEST BOOK I HAVE EVER READ
Review: Though this is the story of a Jewish boy growing up in New York, it felt to me that Wouk had met my soul one day and probed it of its deepest thoughts. No book I have ever read has spoken this directly to me. The theme of alienation is one that anyone, anywhere, Jew or Gentile, male or female can identify with.

It also helps that this is one of the funnier books I have read in a long time. It is a true gem.


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