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The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

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The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman



The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

Best PDF Ebook The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

Now in paperback, the inventive, lushly imagined debut novel—reminiscent of The Tiger's Wife and The History of Love—that explores the intersections of family secrets, Jewish myths, the legacy of war and history, and the bonds between sisters

Sisters Marjorie and Holly are best friends—until Holly converts to a mysterious Jewish sect and marries a controlling man Marjorie despises. When Holly announces she's expecting her first child, Marjorie fears that she's lost her sister forever.

But then Marjorie discovers their late grandfather Eli's notebook and its tale about a wizard named the White Rebbe and his struggle against the Angel of Losses, protector of the lost letter of the alphabet, which completes the secret name of God. Everything Marjorie thought she knew about her family comes undone. To learn the truth, she embarks on an odyssey that will lead her deep into the past and back to the present—and finally to her estranged sister, Holly, whom she must save from the consequences of Eli's secrets.

Interweaving history, theology, and both real and imagined Jewish folktales, The Angel of Losses is a family story of what lasts, and of what we can—and cannot—escape.

The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1121543 in Books
  • Brand: Feldman, Stephanie
  • Published on: 2015-06-23
  • Released on: 2015-06-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .68" w x 5.31" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages
The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

Review “Stephanie Feldman’s debut novel, The Angel of Losses, is haunting. Even more gripping than the real and imagined folktales that Feldman weaves into the book, however, is her exploration of sisterly rifts and bonds and family secrets shrouded by time.” (Philadelphia Inquirer)“In her spellbinding debut novel, Stephanie Feldman tells an epic tale of mystery, discovery, and familial love…Feldman’s debut novel is moving, mature, and deeply original.” (Ploughshares)“Stephanie Feldman writes with tremendous warmth, tenderness and insight, and The Angel of Losses is a smart and beautiful novel that is all at once a literary thriller, a multigenerational family saga and a stunning exploration of Jewish mysticism. I loved this book.” (—Molly Antopol, National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 Honoree and author of The UnAmericans: Stories)“Feldman mixes legend, mystery, and history to create an intricate story that bridges yesterday and today.” (—Historical Novels Review)“Feldman’s debut novel is an unusual combination of literary thriller, family drama, and Jewish mysticism . . . Fans of Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian or the works of Lev Grossman will find something here in a similar vein, but with a little quieter pacing and a little more spirituality.” (—Library Journal)“This impressive debut from Feldman is a page-turner that celebrates sisterly love.” (—Publishers Weekly)“Family saga, mystery, and myth intersect in Feldman’s debut novel...the vivid, imaginative unraveling makes the investigative approach to reading this tale worthwhile.” (—Booklist)“Figures from Jewish mysticism and mythology, a Russian grandfather’s legacy and the fate of a newborn child entwine in [this] inventive debut. With its wheeling stars, magical rabbi, disgraced angels, black dogs and European hinterland, Feldman’s novel . . .has the flavor of Chagall’s visionary art.” (—Kirkus Reviews)“This book was amazing. The protagonist, a grad student in literature, uncovers a story scribbled down by her grandfather, and everything starts to unravel. Jewish folklore. Family secrets. Hidden identities. Hidden notebooks. Bitter estrangements. It’s beautifully constructed and just plain beautiful. Mark your calendars now, people. Mark them now. ” (—Bookriot)“Lucid, tender and masterfully portrayed, The Angel of Losses is an intergenerational story of perseverance and love in a changing world. Rich with Jewish lore and history, there is magic at play here in more than one sense. A must-read.” (—G. Willow Wilson, author of Alif the Unseen)“Stephanie Feldman is one of the smartest and most original young writers at work today...With a deft understanding of the irreducibility of human relationships, Feldman leads us through love and loss and back to love again. Watch out for her. She is here to stay.” (—Sheri Holman, author of The Dress Lodger)“This imaginative first novel leads you on a journey of fantastic tales, stormy family ties and a tragic discovery of redemption that will break your heart.” (Washington Post)“Feldman’s prose is intelligent, engaging, and at times figurative... a versatile virtuosity impressive for a debut work.” (New York Journal of Books)“Feldman is an ambitious writer who conjures up instead a deeply moving modern-day fable that far transcends the boundaries of its location and time.” (NPR, All Things Considered)“The Angel of Losses is an ambitious work by a brilliant new author. (BookPage)“It’s beautifully constructed and just plain beautiful.” (Book Riot)

From the Back Cover

Now in paperback, the inventive, lushly imagined debut novel—reminiscent of The Tiger's Wife and The History of Love—that explores the intersections of family secrets, Jewish myths, the legacy of war and history, and the bonds between sisters

Sisters Marjorie and Holly are best friends—until Holly converts to a mysterious Jewish sect and marries a controlling man Marjorie despises. When Holly announces she's expecting her first child, Marjorie fears that she's lost her sister forever.

But then Marjorie discovers their late grandfather Eli's notebook and its tale about a wizard named the White Rebbe and his struggle against the Angel of Losses, protector of the lost letter of the alphabet, which completes the secret name of God. Everything Marjorie thought she knew about her family comes undone. To learn the truth, she embarks on an odyssey that will lead her deep into the past and back to the present—and finally to her estranged sister, Holly, whom she must save from the consequences of Eli's secrets.

Interweaving history, theology, and both real and imagined Jewish folktales, The Angel of Losses is a family story of what lasts, and of what we can—and cannot—escape.

About the Author

Stephanie Feldman is a graduate of Barnard College. She lives outside Philadelphia with her husband and her daughter.


The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

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Most helpful customer reviews

56 of 57 people found the following review helpful. Not what I expected.. Pleasantly surprised!!! By Spiced Latte Filled with family traditions, culture, and Jewish folklore, The Angel of Losses is definitely a book you do not want to miss. Jewish myths and legends are very unfamiliar to me so reading about the White Rebbe and get to know the actual rituals was really interesting.In the book we are introduced to Marjorie, a young woman who lost her grandfather but always been close with him ever since she was little. Ghost stories always fascinated her so when she gets ahold of her grandfather's notebooks filled with stories that tie closely to Jewish myths, she loses herself in the research to try and find the truth. Meanwhile, she is getting further away from her family, especially her sister. Will this bring them together? Can her dreams really mean something? Marjorie goes through centuries worth of history to find the answers.The Angel of Losses was definitely not what I expected. This type of subject is usually too slow for me but I actually really enjoyed it. The element of a man who appears through the centuries and an old man showing up to Marjorie, intrigued me. Cultural genre is very new for me but this book has definitely made me want to look into it more.

15 of 16 people found the following review helpful. Intriguing By MommaMia Let me begin by saying that this book did take me a bit longer to read than most, and I do intend on reading it again sometime. There were times I wondered if it was me, or if the book wasn't organized well, or if editing was an issue. There are times I felt lost, overwhelmed by information, yet the story held my attention and kept me going. I didn't finish reading it because I had to. I finished because I wanted to.I loved the fairy-tale quality of the book. Those sections of the story that were taken from Eli's notebooks were among my favorite and were very revealing. At first I couldn't understand Eli's feelings, why he hid things from his family, but as I continued to read it started to make sense and fell into place.My confusion came from the content itself. I know very little of Jewish folklore, the old stories, and can't say if any of these stories are based on actual Jewish folklore or if the author made it up. Trying to keep track of the Angel, the Rebbes, the places, imagery...it became a bit overwhelming, yet again, I was intrigued and compelled to read further. It was worth my effort, in my opinion. I think it deserves a second go around and will read it again and hope that this time it will be easier for me.The ending wasn't really a surprise to me, yet again, as I said before, I enjoyed the reading experience enough to find value in that in and of itself. I found that I thought of the White Rebbe and the Angel of Losses even when I wasn't reading and even dreamt of him one night. When a story remains with you like that, you know it's something special.A book about family, love, loss and redemption, The Angel of Losses should find its way to your bookshelf. I guarantee the imagery will remain with you long after you put it down.

15 of 17 people found the following review helpful. Stories of the White Rebbe By Roger Brunyate I recently wrote in the context of another review (Helen Oyeyemi's BOY, SNOW, BIRD) that I disliked fantasy. That thought came back to mock me as I found how much I was enjoying this, a book that begins with a fairy tale told by an old man to his granddaughters, and is punctuated by fantastical tales throughout. I was not just tolerating the fantasy, I was reveling in it. The difference was not in the writing, since both Oyeyemi and Feldman make words obey their bidding, but in the subjects. Oyeyemi writes (inter alia) about race, a subject that plays out very much in the real world; Feldman is writing about religion, which can impact the real world, certainly, but also occupies an entirely different plane. All religions that I know rely on stories; the Judaeo-Christian Bible is a vast compendium of them. Whether you regard them as metaphor or revealed truth, these stories have entered the bloodstream of their respective religious communities. And when you leave the Bible behind to enter the world of the Apocrypha, Kabbalah, and folk legend, the pursuit of stories becomes almost an end in itself.Or so it is for Marjorie Burke, a Barnard PhD candidate in Comparative Literature. Though born and raised a Gentile, she is researching the many legends of the Wandering Jew, the man who cannot die but is condemned to roam to earth forever. She is a little rootless herself, since she feels unwelcome in her family home, which has been taken over by her younger sister Holly and her husband Nathan. Nathan is a member of the (fictional) Berukhim sect, and Holly has converted to orthodox Judaism and changed her name to Chava in order to marry him. What upsets Marjorie most is that, in order to make a nursery for their soon-expected baby, Nathan has gutted the study of her beloved grandfather, and may even have destroyed some of his books. But Marjorie gets hold of one of a series of notebooks that the old man was writing in before he died. She finds it to be a story about a miracle-working "wonder Rebbe" in the eighteenth century, every bit as fascinating as the secular stories of the "White Magician" that her Grandfather used to tell, but clearly with wider-reaching implications.The publishers compare Feldman's novel to THE TIGER'S WIFE by Téa Obreht, but this is only true in that both books are interspersed with folk tales. They also mention Nicole Kraus' A HISTORY OF LOVE, which brings the storytelling into a Jewish context, but it would have been even more appropriate to cite Dara Horn's THE WORLD TO COME, and even THE FLAME ALPHABET by Ben Marcus. The latter is an altogether more fantastical book than the others, but I thought of it because both Marcus and Feldman make use of the Jewish mystical belief that there is a 23rd letter to the Hebrew alphabet that will be revealed only upon the arrival of the Messiah, and that will complete the holy name of God. By the time this is mentioned in Feldman's novel, we have gone way beyond folk tales to eschatological issues that might almost come from a Jewish version of the Book of Revelation.For three-quarters of the novel at least, I was in five-star territory, being totally drawn in to the stories of the White Rebbe and at least somewhat invested in Marjorie's life in the real world: her research, a budding romance, and the increasing complications of her relationship with her sister. But inevitably there comes the point where the two worlds of fantasy and reality must intertwine. And indeed it becomes increasingly clear that the tale of the White Rebbe is by no means over, and that its outcome can affect Marjorie and all she holds dear. But there it lost me. Not because I was not prepared to accept that real problems might have fantasy-based solutions (an allowance I was less prepared to make with Oyeyemi), but because the fantasy itself became so complex, and I got confused between the various angels and revenants in their various guises. I am still not sure exactly what happened in the last thirty pages. But up to that point, it was a terrific ride.

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The Angel of Losses: A Novel, by Stephanie Feldman

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