9780892965403-0892965401-Zaddik

Zaddik

ISBN-13: 9780892965403
ISBN-10: 0892965401
Edition: First Edition
Author: David Rosenbaum
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Mysterious Press
Format: Hardcover 438 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780892965403
ISBN-10: 0892965401
Edition: First Edition
Author: David Rosenbaum
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Mysterious Press
Format: Hardcover 438 pages

Summary

Zaddik (ISBN-13: 9780892965403 and ISBN-10: 0892965401), written by authors David Rosenbaum, was published by Mysterious Press in 1993. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Zaddik (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

At the center of the story is ex-NYPD cop Dov Taylor, ruinously profligate, recently divorced, and a recovering alcoholic. Now working as a bank guard, Taylor is unexpectedly called on to recover one of the world's greatest and least known treasures: a magnificent 72-carat diamond known as the Seer's stone. The stone had been intended for the dowry in a magnificent and historic wedding uniting two powerful, bitterly antagonistic Hasidic sects.
Now, the Seer's stone has vanished from the sanctum of Manhattan's diamond center and fallen into the hands of the man they call the Magician, a Polish Nazi collaborator and notorious war criminal.
Carrying out the Magician's bidding is a figure equally as frightening: the Cutter, an aging Mossad terrorist as implacable as the Angel of Death, who guts his victims according to the Jewish laws for ritual slaughter. To retrieve the Seer's stone, Dov Taylor must not only descend into an exotic, dangerous domain of mystics who live for God and psychopaths who destroy for their own gain, but also enter the untapped and astonishing depths of his own consciousness.
In a quest no policeman has ever dreamed of undertaking, Taylor forges a link through time and continents with his own exalted ancestor, Hirsh Leib of Orlik, a zaddik and prince of Israel from a nineteenth-century Poland storm-tossed by war and fanaticism. To Taylor, Hirsh Leib has transmitted the spark of saintly power, as well as the key to both the disappearance of the Seer's stone and the riddle of Taylor's personal anguish. Condemned to trust no one, neither former police colleagues nor fellow Jews, Taylor navigates the evils of the old world and the new - struggling to comply with a law older and more awesome than any on the books.

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