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Loss of Memory Is Only Temporary
Loss of Memory Is Only Temporary | Johanna Kaplan
1 post | 1 read
A funny, fresh, and brilliantly insightful collection of stories from a beloved writer, with a new introduction by Francine Prose Johanna Kaplan’s beautifully written stories first burst on the literary scene in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Today they have retained all of their depth, surprise, and humor—their simultaneously scathing, hilarious, and compassionate insight into character and behavior. From Miriam, home from school with the measles, to Louise, the daughter of a family that fled Vienna for the Dominican Republic, to Naomi, a young psychiatrist, her heroines are fierce, tender, funny, and cuttingly smart. At once specific to a particular period, place, and milieu—mainly, Jewish New York in the decades after World War II—Kaplan’s stories resonate with universal significance. In this new collection, which includes both early and later stories, unforgettably vivid characters are captured in all of their forceful presence and singularity, their foolishness and their wisdom, their venality and their nobility, while, hovering in the background, the inexorable passage of time and the unending pull of memory render silent judgment. In its pitch-perfect command of dialogue matched with interwoven subtleties of insight and feeling and a masterful control of language, Loss of Memory Is Only Temporary is itself a timeless collection of the finest work by one of the most extraordinary talents of our age.
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Anna40
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Brilliant,cleverly written. But I‘m sure this is not for everyone. Especially the first story Other people‘s lives with its despicable characters and long conversations either amuses or annoys the reader or does both. All stories are heavily Jewish themed in particular Jews of NYC in the 1960s and 1970s. I enjoyed the stories, don‘t have a favourite. I do want to read more of what Kaplan wrote, I think she's best known for her novel…