The Free Thinkers: Stories of the New World
By (Author) Silbert Layle
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
1st August 2011
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
317
Width 158mm, Height 238mm
600g
Layle Silbert's stories, like those of Grace Paley or Tillie Olson, trace the life lines of struggles and joys overlooked - familiar lives led in a time now past. In this collection Silbert gives these lost lives a new voice, describing in exacting detail the world of Eastern European Jews newly arrived in turn-of-the-century-America. She chronicles their arrival in the New Worlds of Chicago and New York, follows them as they trade Yiddish and Russian for English, find work in factories and Jewish newspapers, attend meetings and struggle toward the promise of freedom.
Both novellas, sliding from laughter to warmhearted sentiment as they pass deftly through different character's minds and voices, show Silbert's easy mastery of the Yiddish-American storytelling tradition. Kirkus
Throughout, Silbert captures in sepia tones urban street scenes and ethnic parlors, and deftly uncovers the emotional landscape underneath. Taken together, these narratives constitute a revealing portrayal of the American immigrant experience. Publishers Weekly
In [Silbert's] writing, the maverick camera of her pen zigzags into unexplored wrinkles of lives. Cynthia Ozick
I can't think of anything in recent years that has so evoked the Old Country in this country.The Free Thinkersis a very rich book. I loved it. Tillie Olsen
[Silbert] is plain deep. She's unsentimental, touching, brave. Grace Paley
Born in 1913 in a Yiddish-speaking household in Chicago, LAYLE SILBERT attended the University of Chicago and pursued a career in social work before before turning, later in life, to photography and fiction. By the 1960s Silbert had moved to New York City, where she was involved in both literary and radical feminist circles. Her acclaimed photographs, primarily of contemporary writers such as Nelson Algren, James Baldwin, and Elizabeth Bishop, were exhibited more than thirty times in the United States and internationally. All the while Silbert was writing in a variety of forms, including poems and a handful of personal essay, but she primarily considered herself a writer of short fiction. Her stories were published in the New York Quarterly, Literary Review, and Salmagundi, among others. The collection of stories included in Yudl, published by Seven Stories, was selected by the author for publication in the last days before her death. Silbert died in 2003.