A debut novel of daring originality, The Yid guarantees that you will never think of Stalinist Russia, Shakespeare, theater, Yiddish, or history the same way again.
Paul Goldberg first heard a Moscow myth about Jews using blood for religious rituals when he was 10, in 1969. By the time he immigrated to the US in 1973, he had gathered the massive collection of Moscow stories which underpin his debut novel, The Yid. As a reporter, Goldberg has written two books about the Soviet human rights movement,The Final Act and The Thaw Generation (with Ludmilla Alexeyeva). He is the editor and publisher of The Cancer Letter, a weekly publication focused on the business and politics of cancer, and coauthor (with Otis Brawley) of a book about the American healthcare system, How We Do Harm. His articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and elsewhere, and he has been featured on 60 Minutes, 20/20, CNN, and NPR. He lives in Washington, DC.
"Audacious... [A] dazzling tragicomic debut."
--Jane Ciabattari, NPR.org "[A] singular debut novel.... An
ambitious historical fantasy.... Evoking the clash of tone and
subject found in movies like The Producers and The Great
Dictator, The Yid is a screwball farce about
atrocity."
--Maureen Corrigan, NPR's Fresh Air "Mr. Goldberg has written a
book that revolves about Stalin's final blow against the country's
remaining Jews.... Mr. Goldberg comes up with a team of
Yiddish-speaking jokester-superheroes who are at the heart of his
story, and who make it their mission to avenge countless acts of
anti-Semitism, both real and anticipated.... The Yid is
about Stalin's worst enemy as well as his favorite prey."
--Janet Maslin, The New York Times "The Yid is darkly
playful and generous with quick insights into the vast weirdness of
its landscape."
--Glen David Gold, The Washington Post "This novel's black
humor is surpassed only by its historical audacity and literary
fearlessness.... If you're looking for the next "Catch-22," it may
be for you."
--Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "The Yid [is
a] rollicking romp of a novel... In something like the mode of
writer-director Quentin Tarantino in his films Inglourious
Basterds and Django Unchained, Goldberg offers The
Yid as a literary score-settling machine: a way for one of
history's most brutal villains to receive a kind of cosmic
comeuppance at the hands of those he victimized in real life. The
difference is that unlike Tarantino, whose revenge fantasies
undercut their higher purpose with an excess of sensational
violence, Goldberg is less interested in the body than he is in the
soul.... The Yid is as hilarious as it is appalling, and
vice versa."
--Kevin Nance, Chicago Tribune "Wily, rambunctiously
entertaining [with] irresistible characters.... Goldberg's
rapier-like, galvanizing novel unwinds in three acts punctuated by
hilarious, flashing, and slashing dialogue as these rebels of
temperaments deliberate and impulsive, skills invaluable and
surprising, and memories painful and inspiriting, banter, lewdly
insult each other, and argue over Shakespeare, Pushkin, Akhmatova,
medical ethics, the broken promise of socialism, anti-Semitism, and
racism.... Goldberg deftly presents plays within plays, in which
his heroic, smart, acerbic, wildly improvising, cool-under-fire
characters use stagecraft to attempt an impossible mission."
--Donna Seaman, Booklist (STARRED REVIEW)
"Breathtaking."
--Publishers Weekly "[A] fantastical (and fantastic) debut
novel... Highly recommended for readers with a grasp of history who
enjoy imaginative deviations from what we think we know as
historical truth."
--Edward B. Cone, Library Journal (STARRED REVIEW) "The
Yid is a quirky mixture of tones, blending the somber import of
Bernard Malamud's The Fixer with the madcap humor of Gary
Shteyngart."
--Mark Athitakis, Kirkus "A brilliant novel that is at once
surreally comic, suspenseful -- if slightly cracked -- and
punctuated with eruptions of violence, but with a poignant
ending.... An extraordinary, rich and surprising tale of
intrigue... Paul Goldberg has been aptly compared to a whole
constellation of Jewish literary geniuses -- Sholem Aleichem,
Philip Roth, Cynthia Ozick, E.L. Doctorow, Michael Chabon and even
the Coen brothers. (I would hasten to add Mordecai Richler to the
list.) And The Yid is proof that he surely belongs in their
lofty ranks."
--Jonathan Kirsch, The Jewish Journal "Blending historical
figures and the scope of Shakespeare, this is a take on history
unlike any other."
--Vol.1 Brooklyn "A bizarre and wonderfully discursive
novel... a tour de force of riotous humor set in the dark and
blood-stained Soviet Union of the 1950s when Stalin's periodic
paranoia and murderous anti-Semitism reemerge.... With Kafka, as
with more contemporary Jewish writers like Joseph Heller, Michael
Chabon and Nathan Englander, we have become familiar with
literature that successfully blends murder with mirth, and the
hilarious with the horrific."
--Gerald Sorin, Haaretz "Goldberg packs layers of meaning
and atmosphere into the story, deftly blending humor and horror....
Goldberg's achievement in The Yid transcends the misery and
evil he portrays. Just as Shakespeare inserts jesters among the
gore of his tragedies, Goldberg has constructed a tragedy instead
of a travesty of the human spirit."
--Stephanie Shapiro, The Buffalo News "Most fiction and
nonfiction accounts of Stalin-era arrests go like this: The secret
police come in the night and take the accused away in a Black
Maria, to never be seen again. The neighbors sit by quietly,
pretending not to have heard a thing. Mr. Goldberg amends this with
a very American sensibility, replacing fear and submission with
Tarantino-esque swagger."
--Anya Ulinich, The Wall Street Journal "No act of violence,
no sacred subject, no reference high or low escapes Goldberg's
manic, discursive delight in this novel of an old Jewish stage
actor and the unlikely troupe he assembles to assassinate Joseph
Stalin."
--O, The Oprah Magazine "[A] vivid and whip-smart look at
the Cold War and its implications for our world today."
--Patrik Henry Bass, Essence "Seriously funny, absurd and
violent."
--Glenn C. Altschuler, Jerusalem Post "An absorbing
historical page-turner that somehow wrings delight from the
terrible... Goldberg pushes and pulls history as needed to work his
magic.... It's a good story, but what makes this such a terrific
book is the author's confident mastery of the world he immerses us
in, the fascinating and tragic back stories he weaves with little
loss of narrative momentum, and his conspiratorial relationship to
the reader...."
--Daniel Akst, Newsday "One of the most distinctive and
curious aspects of The Yid is its odd balance between
seriousness and comedy. Have you had that experience of reading
The New Yorker, where you're in the middle of a searing
article about, say, Stalin's anti-Semitism, and you're struck by
the incongruity of there being a silly little cartoon of a talking
dog in the middle of the page? The evocation of that feeling seems
to be not just a major characteristic of The Yid, but its
animating impulse."
--Josh Lambert, Moment "In The Yid, preparations for
the pogrom are described with persuasive vividness.... Goldberg
painfully evokes the anti-Semitic atmosphere in which Stalin's
pogrom would have been conducted... The testimony of what observers
saw and what they believed is a key tool in our understanding of
the past. There is little in The Yid, at least in regard to
the plans for the pogrom, that doesn't show up in the accounts of
what Soviet Jews feared."
--Ken Kalfus, The New Yorker Page-Turner "On one level,
The Yid, Goldberg's first novel, is a tribute to the
millions who were exiled and murdered during Stalin's ruthless
three-decade reign... On another, it's a celebration of Jewish
humor, theater and language--Yiddish is sprinkled throughout the
book, and, in choosing the title, Goldberg reclaims the word "yid"
from those who've used it as a slur. These are weighty themes, but
The Yid wears them with style, because it also happens to be
a satisfying thriller."
--Kevin Canfield, The Star Tribune "Provocative... Imagine a
Solzhenitsyn tale set in the lethal Soviet world, but restyled by
Larry David.... Remarkable."
--Jim Higgins, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel "If a plot by two
aging Bolshevik fighters to save Soviet Jews by killing Stalin
sounds crazy, just wait until you read this book! The Yid is
Paul Goldberg's sophisticated, multiform, madcap romp through the
alternative Soviet universe of fantasy as reality set in February
1953... The Yid is a rollicking delight."
--Neal Gendler, The American Jewish World "[THE YID is] as
much history and philosophy as it is fiction. I've never read
anything like it. Believe me, neither have you."
--Lily Meyer, Electric Literature "With The Yid,
Goldberg has found a graceful balance of gallows humor and film
noir cloak-and-dagger suspense, blending hard-boiled action with
Shakespearean allusions."
--Jeff Milo, Paste Magazine "10 of the Best New Books in
February 2016" "Paul Goldberg gives Soviet terror a wild spin in
The Yid. When Stalin's henchmen come for an aging Jewish
actor, all hell breaks hilariously loose."
--More "Paul Goldberg's electric debut novel brings to mind,
all at once: Isaac Babel, Malamud, Dostoyevsky's Demons, and Nathan
Englander--but his voice is wholly his own. Goldberg turns Stalin's
Russia into the stuff of myth, while making it somehow knowable. It
is iconoclastic, gleefully profane, anachronistic and coolly
modern, bawdy and bloody, antic and razor-smart. Which is to say:
THE YID is a rollicking reading experience unlike any other."
--Daniel Torday, author of The Last Flight of Poxl West
"This is a sly, inventive novel that ripples with a kind of
inventiveness in historical fiction that I've rarely seen.
'Historians trawl with broken nets, ' says the author. But this is
a densely woven net -- a text that captures a dark phase of human
history with bravura. Real and unreal figures gather as the plot
unfolds against the backdrop of Soviet malevolence. Paul Goldberg
takes us through a narrative hall of mirrors, makes us wince and
laugh, and he never loses his momentum. A brilliant debut
novel."
--Jay Parini, author of The Last Station "Paul Goldberg's
THE YID is an antic joyride through a grim period in Russian
history. With glints of Kafka and The Big Lebowski, Goldberg's
artful satire about antisemitism is wholly his own, and proves yet
again why Jews own gallows humor."
--Lisa Zeidner, author of Layover and Love
Bomb
"THE YID is one of the best debut novels in years. Pour yourself a
vodka and settle in for a work of extravagant imagination, a tale
of life and death and survival, written with brio. L'chaim! Na
Zdorovie!"
--Keith Donohue, bestselling author of The Stolen Child and
The Boy Who Drew Monsters
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