9781592643578-1592643574-A Guest for the Night

A Guest for the Night

ISBN-13: 9781592643578
ISBN-10: 1592643574
Edition: New forward by Jeffrey Saks
Author: S.Y. Agnon
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Toby Press
Format: Paperback 531 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781592643578
ISBN-10: 1592643574
Edition: New forward by Jeffrey Saks
Author: S.Y. Agnon
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Toby Press
Format: Paperback 531 pages

Summary

A Guest for the Night (ISBN-13: 9781592643578 and ISBN-10: 1592643574), written by authors S.Y. Agnon, was published by Toby Press in 2014. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other Jewish Life (Judaism) books. You can easily purchase or rent A Guest for the Night (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Jewish Life books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $1.13.

Description

A Guest for the Night (first published in 1939 as Germany invaded Poland) is Agnon's depiction of how all modern movements aside from Zionism secularism, Haskalah, socialism, communism failed to provide a viable alternative to traditional life. But, he is clear, even traditional life was untenable, because it all fell apart from within before the first furnaces were ignited in Auschwitz. Even the Guest's well-intentioned attempt to revivify and to re-engage the lost world of piety is also doomed. The Alte Heim, the old home, can no longer exist it is a place where we can only be passing guests for the night. Therefore you can't go home again, but not for the reasons that Thomas Wolfe suggests; rather, because home no longer exists. It has to be rebuilt, but it can only be rebuilt in the Bayit Hadash, in the new home in the Land of Israel. This is Agnon's greatest theme in the novel and, in differing ways, throughout his body of writing: The idea that modern man, modern Jews, are alienated from their spiritual home. While we can't go home again, that doesn't mean we can't move forward through conceiving of a new home although doing so comes with the great danger of being caught in the disconnect between the old and the new, between what was and what might be.

Translated by Misha Louvish, with a new Foreword by Jeffrey Saks.

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