Elliot Perlman is the author of The Reasons I Won't Be Coming and Seven Types of Ambiguity. He also cowrote the award-winning screenplay for a film version of Three Dollars, his first novel. He lives in Australia.
Praise for Elliot Perlman's The Street Sweeper"[I]t seems
somehow fitting that the author of The Street Sweeper, a
wonderfully rich, engaging and multilayered new novel about blacks
and Jews in Chicago and New York, would hail from Australia. I've
been a fan of Elliot Perlman's work since his 1998 novel Three
Dollars. That book and his massive Seven Types of Ambiguity (2004)
revealed him to be an author of rare erudition and compassion. But
The Street Sweeper is his boldest work yet..." - The Washington
Post
"The Street Sweeper is an impressive literary achievement,
complex in its organization, meticulous in its plotting and deeply
satisfying in its emotional payoffs." - The Wall Street
Journal
"In the best kind of books, there is always that moment when the
words on the page swallow the world outside - subway stations fly
by, errands go un-run, rational bedtimes are abandoned - and the
only goal is to gobble up the next paragraph, and the next, and the
next... A towering achievement: a strikingly modern literary novel
that brings the ugliest moments of 20th-century history to life,
and finds real beauty there." - Entertainment Weekly
"As characters interact and fates intertwine, Perlman tells an
engaging multi-generational saga witnessing personal histories that
heroically endure and survive brutal and horrific racism to become
what we know as the history of the Holocaust and the American Civil
Rights movement. At his best, Perlman accomplishes this literary
feat by evoking remarkable depth and meaning in otherwise
commonplace events and characters.... [W]hat is most memorable
about this richly woven tale is the lessons about the importance of
memory and remembering, and the novel's underlying compassion and
sense of history." - USA Today
"An epic tale that spans decades and bridges generations while
chronicling the predominant chapters of racial persecution
perpetrated in the darkest hours of the 20th century... Perlman is
a consummate storyteller... This stunning novel works, and matters,
because of the expert way Perlman has recorded both the agonized
howl of the past and the plaintive echoes of the present." - San
Francisco Chronicle
"The Street Sweeper connects up its large cast of
characters, telling a grim but buoyant story, full of humanity and
brave acts. Reading it provides that uncommon thrill in fiction: a
philosophical page-turner." - Cleveland Plain Dealer
"The Street Sweeper is a big novel in every sense... It's
filled with color and characters whose unlikely connection tells
the stories of contemporary New York, 1930s Warsaw and 1950s
Chicago." - The Forward
"Perlman offers an affecting meditation on memory itself, on
storytelling as an act of healing." - The Guardian (UK)
"An expertly told novel of life in immigrant America--and of the
terrible events left behind in the old country." - Kirkus
Reviews (STARRED)
"Brilliantly makes personal both the Holocaust and the civil rights
movement.... A moving and literate page-turner." - Publishers
Weekly (STARRED)
"Perlman's compulsively readable wrestle-with-evil saga is intimate
and monumental, wrenching and cathartic." - Booklist
(STARRED)
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