Rating:  Summary: A book that reaches your heart through your mind Review: As a teacher of literature for 23 years, I have watched students from age 16 to 80 become fully engaged with The Assistant. After they finish, they feel fulfilled, uplifted, enlightened, and even (God forbid!) more knowledgeable. The main characters -- Morris, a modest Jewish grocery store owner in New York, and Frank, a young Italian hoodlum trying to change into a mensch--steal your heart away. Of course, Malamud is never sentimental. He uses your mind to reach into your heart. It's not just Frank who changes for the better in this book; it's all who read it well.
Rating:  Summary: THE ASSISTANT ENDURES Review: As an author with my debut novel in its initial release, I hope my work endures as well as the work of Bernard Malamud. THE ASSISTANT is a simple novel that captures perfectly its time and place. It is also a morality tale. It features a street thrug named Frank Alpine who thinks he might want to turn his life around. He takes a job at a Mom and Pop grocery store to privately atone for a crime against that store (as well as other crimes elsewhere). He agrees to work for room-and-board. There is ethnic tension between the Jewish grocery store owners and the Italian criminal. These tensions grow more severe when a romance develops between Frank and the grocer's daughter. This novel comes as close to being perfect as any I've read in recent years.
Rating:  Summary: THE ASSISTANT ENDURES Review: As an author with my debut novel in its initial release, I hope my work endures as well as the work of Bernard Malamud. THE ASSISTANT is a simple novel that captures perfectly its time and place. It is also a morality tale. It features a street thrug named Frank Alpine who thinks he might want to turn his life around. He takes a job at a Mom and Pop grocery store to privately atone for a crime against that store (as well as other crimes elsewhere). He agrees to work for room-and-board. There is ethnic tension between the Jewish grocery store owners and the Italian criminal. These tensions grow more severe when a romance develops between Frank and the grocer's daughter. This novel comes as close to being perfect as any I've read in recent years.
Rating:  Summary: Tough, Gritty Fiction Review: As I recall, this was a pretty good book. It is not the most readable novel featuring a pretty ordinary story filled with pretty unextraordinary characters. However, I liked the way it was delivered - tough, realistic, rarely embellished. It tells the story of a Jewish grocer's relationship with an Italian thug in Brooklyn. I read with the same feeling I might have of my own daily life. Every inflatable theme is curbed by sober reality - friendship, love, sex, marriage, crime, duty, "redemption." A recommended read.
Rating:  Summary: Claustrophobia Review: Bernard Malamud's second novel could make a fledgling writer think of embarking on another career. Its mature, focused, tightly knit plot, rolls along on its own wheels which, in this case, would be a fifty-five Chevy. The post-war economic boom hadn't trickled down to Morris Bober and his family. He and his poor wife Ida are slaves to a grocery store in one of the boroughs of New York City and business is always bad. As Morris struggles against cutthroat competition to eke out a marginal living, Malamud examines Morris' character, hopes, dreams and predominantly, his failures. So far as that goes, there are only failures for the Bober family, and Morris is a character in conflict with his religion and his humanity. Jewishness, being Jewish, is an unmistakeable element in this novel and Morris finds his humanistic or religious values in conflict with his survival skills. His neighbor, Karp, operates a liquor store, rents out apartments to others, and makes a "nice living". It makes no difference to Karp that alcoholics come into his store to buy booze; the reality is that a man must take care of his family. On the other hand, Morris Bober is ruled by kindness, compassion, and humanity. These values are part of his ancestral origins. Morris cannot abandon himself to single-minded money grubbing and greed and therefore he has difficulty surviving in the modern economic culture. Morris' old world backwardness gets in the way of survival, yet he cannot stoop to what he perceives as a low level of human functioning. It's a tribute to Malamud's artistry that Morris' internal conflict is revealed with no explicit dramatization of formal Jewish religious practice. Indeed, the ethnic and traditional conflicts characterized by the Bober family are common among other ethnic groups in America. Furthermore, the Bober's are estranged from synagogues and formal religion. The only time a rabbi appears in this story is at the end of the book when Morris dies. Ironically, he dies just as he is finally on the verge of succeeding. Even then, his potential for success is more a matter of happenstance than ambition. Taking care of his family is Morris' driving ambition yet the harder he works the deeper he gets into a hopeless morass, a void of despair which consumes his health and his hopes. If there's a bright spot in Morris and Ida's life together, it's in the future of their lovely daughter Helen who works as a secretary and dreams of a college education. The Bober's hopes for Helen's future are threatened by the arrival of Frankie Alpine, a handsome "Italyener" , a young man trying to escape a checkered past. Frankie's been an orphan, a wanderer, a hood, and probably a lot of other things. The romance angle enters the novel. But what future possibilities does a guy like Frankie Alpine hold for a nice Jewish girl like Helen? His chances are slim to none, as they say. Frankie doesn't understand himself at all. In some sense, he seeks redemption but in another sense he can't escape his appetites and habits . Frankie has great passion and strength but he must fight for control of himself. He has a bad news friend named Ward, son of a cop, who drinks too much and robs people. Which figures into why Frankie is there working in the Bober failing family enterprise in the first place. Something should be said of Malamud's adept use of language, which adds to the claustrophobic texture of the novel, the sense of being locked up in a tedious quotidien existence, and also provides boundless humor in this otherwise stark story. The use of words like "holdupnik" and other creative language structures makes you feel like you're there, in the family, sweating it out with the Bobers. This is really a terrific novel, magnificently constructed, with an intensely developed plot and characters that live and breathe. Immensely worth reading whether you're Jewish or Italyener like me.
Rating:  Summary: A tug of war of a book - a tragedy a minute. Review: Halfway through "The Assistant" I felt confident enough to make a prediction about its ending. The prediction turned out to be only partly correct, but that is beyond the point. That prediction is at all possible is a sure indication that the author failed to engage me as a reader. Once the prediction is made the book is trapped: if it comes true, then the book is predictable; if it doesn't, then one has the full right to complain about contrived plot twists.Why did I feel confident enough to guess the ending? Because the story is painfully obvious. The story - and the outcome - are evident immediately after the first few pages. A struggling Jewish grocer is robbed, but one of the robbers has a conscience and clandestinely comes back to the store to work off the damage. We aren't told this in these exact words until page fifty or so, but it's obvious as soon as we see the character of Frank Alpine. Here is a character that is engaged in Deep Moral Struggle. Since this is a predictable book, all that is necessary to find out the remainder of the plot is to ask a few questions: Will Frank gather enough self-control to become a decent person (Y/N)? Will the store do better with him around (Y/N)? Will he fall in love with the grocer's daughter (Y/N)? And so on, and so forth. It was with a sinking heart that I guessed the beginnng and the ending, and then beheld the two hundred pages in between. What else could possibly happen? Read on. In those two hundren-odd pages, the book turns into the absolutely sappiest melodrama ever written. To be sure, "The Assistant" lacks a main conflict. Yes, the store is a shambles; yes, these people have been slaving away for nothing; yes, they live in poverty; yes, they're Jews. Those themes almost never surface. Instead, Malamud fills space with the most contrived, cliche mini-conflicts imaginable. I'll leave it up to you to find out what they are, but each of those conflicts is written like it is the end of the world. Of course, it can't be, since there's still 2/3 of the book to go, but the characters gnash and lament like there's no tomorrow anyway. Malamud frantically stitches viewpoint characters, often three times in a single page, to illustrate their grief from all perspectives. Rule #1: the author can only cry "wolf" so many times before it loses punch. It took us four "Scream" movies to get this down. Of course, Malamud predates "Scream". The book reminds me of a scene from a Simpsons Halloween special, where Homer purchases a birthday present from an occult curio store (shades of Matheson's short story "Prey"). The toy is evil. "That's bad", Homer replies. But it comes with a free frozen yogurt! "That's good!" The yogurt is also evil. "That's bad." But it comes with your choice of toppings! "That's good!" The toppings contain potassium benzoate. Homer stares stupidly. "That's bad," the clerk helps him out. The book wouldn't have been as bad if the characters were more solid. The grocer and his wife are stereotypes: Morris is gruff but forgiving, while Ida is the precursor of every strict Jewish mother that ever was. Frank, on the other hand, is a walking collection of human traits that are only loosely connected. He's street-smart and ruthless, both patient and impatient, a gentleman and an animal, frigid and lustful, caring and obscene, both with and without a conscience. He's so diffuse that the reader cannot identify with him. "The Assistant" cannot choose one of its numerous running themes to center on. It tugs the reader this way and that. Characters fall in love, and break up, and fall in love again. Malamud throws so many things at the reader, that after a while the only effect of reading the book is a dull heartache.
Rating:  Summary: A great read! Review: I found this book in a used book store and bought it not knowing anything about the book or its author. I'm glad I bought it and read it. It was a wonderful insight into human hearts.
Rating:  Summary: One of my favorite books! Review: I read this book for a class in high school. That was over 10 years ago and it is still one of my favorites. I read the whole thing in 2 days!
Rating:  Summary: One of my favorite books! Review: I read this book for a class in high school. That was over 10 years ago and it is still one of my favorites. I read the whole thing in 2 days!
Rating:  Summary: Page after page interest! Review: If ever there was a verbally-tight book, it is this. Every page is interesting, every word, and there is never a dull page. In true Melamud style, the stories are short but powerful. The superb writing of the plot moves consistently. However, I did get the feeling toward the end that a number of dramatic sequences seemed crammed at the end, and without the minute attention paid to the earlier part of the story. The plot evolves in post-war, a neighborhood in New York among an aging Jewish grocer whose deli/food store business struggles amidst modernism and greedy competition. The main characters, Morris, his stoic wife Ida and a grown daughter Helen live above the store and work long hours to keep it alive. Daughter Helen yearns to have a loving man and an education. Enter Frank Alpine, a young Italian man who after a criminal act upon Morris, and unbeknown to Morris, Frank lands a job in the store to pay his debt. Here, he continuously fends off his demons while attempting to follow a morally correct life and in his command, the store goes through economic and physical changes that fluctuate greatly, not always good or bad. And, as expected, he falls in love with the daughter and their relationship takes turns and twists too. Immediately, Melamud gives us a distinct picture of the desperation the family endures. You can grasp with ease the images and separation of personalities. This is done with precision applied by the finest authors. We get more than we anticipate, when Melamud provides extensive insight into his character descriptions, and most important, to their thoughts. Above that, he provides us with questions and answers we might need to further develop the characters thoughts and actions. After absorption into the story, I still had questions and I'm sure you will too and maybe it takes another read. Overall, the short classic is excellent. ........MzRizz
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