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De joodse messias

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  • 496pages
  • 18 heures de lecture

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The Jewish Messiah is not about Judaism, nor about the Messiah nor about any of the political or historical entities that may be hidden, or referred to, in the book. It is about a young individual, Basel-resident Xavier Radek, grandson of a late SS-member. He needs a mission and, wanting to know more about Jewish suffering, decides to "console the Jews." He converts to Zionism, and falls in love with the Jew Awromele. Xavier's almost fatal circumcision, performed by a half-blind dealer of kosher cheese, is described in some of Grünberg's most hilarious scenes. This book, together with the Van der Jagt works, confirms Grünbergs unique position within Dutch literature. An illustration of the sense of humour employed in the book is the name "King David" given to the testicle Radek lost (during his circumcision), which is worshipped when Radek is PM of Israel. Actual political issues, something Grünberg is not interested in employing in his books in the first place, are merely referred to because they are simply fun to use.

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De joodse messias, Arnon Grunberg

Langue
Année de publication
2016
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(souple),
État du livre
Abîmé
Prix
0,78 €

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3,5
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Langue
Néerlandais
Éditeur
Lebowski
Publié
2016
Format
souple
Pages
496
ISBN10
9048835011
ISBN13
9789048835010
Séries
Titre original
De joodse messias
Évaluation
3,5 sur 5
Description
The Jewish Messiah is not about Judaism, nor about the Messiah nor about any of the political or historical entities that may be hidden, or referred to, in the book. It is about a young individual, Basel-resident Xavier Radek, grandson of a late SS-member. He needs a mission and, wanting to know more about Jewish suffering, decides to "console the Jews." He converts to Zionism, and falls in love with the Jew Awromele. Xavier's almost fatal circumcision, performed by a half-blind dealer of kosher cheese, is described in some of Grünberg's most hilarious scenes. This book, together with the Van der Jagt works, confirms Grünbergs unique position within Dutch literature. An illustration of the sense of humour employed in the book is the name "King David" given to the testicle Radek lost (during his circumcision), which is worshipped when Radek is PM of Israel. Actual political issues, something Grünberg is not interested in employing in his books in the first place, are merely referred to because they are simply fun to use.