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- BOOKS, Page 61The Last Teller of TalesIsaac Bashevis Singer: 1904-1991
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- By STEFAN KANFER
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- It was easy for Isaac Bashevis Singer to believe in
- miracles. He was proof that they existed. In 1935 the rabbi's
- son journeyed from Warsaw to New York City to visit his brother,
- novelist Israel Joshua Singer, and thereby escaped the
- Holocaust. He described vanished worlds in a dying language to
- a dwindling audience and was awarded the 1978 Nobel Prize for
- Literature. He was unknown at 40, but last week, when I.B.
- Singer died of a stroke at the age of 87, he was the most
- applauded Polish-born writer since Joseph Conrad.
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- Singer had every right to act the celebrity, yet he was
- never at home in the modern style. His works were often
- published first in Yiddish in The Jewish Daily Forward and later
- in translation. Saul Bellow brought him wide recognition by
- rendering the poignant anecdote Gimpel the Fool in English. But
- royalties were slow to arrive, and for many years Singer lived
- modestly on the earnings of his second wife Alma, a buyer at
- Saks Fifth Avenue. Until late in life he kept his name in the
- Manhattan phone book, and at lunch hour he could be found
- munching a vegetarian meal at his favorite West Side cafeteria.
- When he was asked, "Do you abstain from meat for your health?"
- Singer liked to focus his cerulean eyes on the interviewer. "I
- don't worry about my arteries," he would explain. "I worry about
- the arteries of the chicken."
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- Intellectuals and academics made him uncomfortable. Their
- questions about theology and philosophy were met with the
- deadpan reply, "We must believe in free will. We have no
- choice." Singer's favorite readers were the very young because
- "children read books, not reviews. They don't give a hoot about
- the critics." Besides, "they still believe in God, the family,
- angels, devils, witches, goblins, logic, clarity, punctuation
- and other such obsolete stuff."
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- So did the author. When I.J. Singer died in 1944, I.B.
- assumed the literary role. But the elder brother had been a
- rationalist and a radical. The younger one was apolitical and
- haunted by "a God who speaks in deeds, not in words, and whose
- vocabulary is the universe." The biblical and supernatural tales
- of youth provided the underpinnings of his work. As Singer's
- rickety Yiddish typewriter chattered away, the ghettos of the
- Middle Ages rose up again, with a cast of erotic shtetl dwellers
- and phosphorescent imps. The Jews of 20th century Europe,
- consumed by the Nazi death camps, were granted the powers of
- speech and lust.
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- Throughout his career Singer was criticized for this mix
- of sexuality and catastrophe. In his Nobel lecture he finally
- replied: "The pessimism of the creative person is not decadence
- but a mighty passion for the redemption of man. While the poet
- entertains he continues to search for eternal truths . . . to
- find an answer to suffering, to reveal love in the very abyss
- of cruelty and injustice."
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- For most long-lived authors, the late 70s and early 80s
- are considered the declining years. Not for Singer: his mighty
- passion continued for several more volumes. He found new
- audiences in 1983 when Barbra Streisand adapted his Yentl, the
- Yeshiva Boy for the screen, and in 1989 when Paul Mazursky
- directed Enemies, A Love Story. In his 80s Singer offered eight
- works in translation, including The Death of Methuselah, and
- Other Stories and a novel of prehistory, The King of the Fields.
- His last book, Scum, a glum moral fable, appeared last spring.
- (The Certificate will be published posthumously early next
- year.) None of his collections, novels, plays, autobiographies
- or children's books could be categorized -- except as
- productions of the last authentic teller of folk-tales. That was
- the way he wanted it. "The various schools and `isms' of
- literature were invented by professors," he maintained. "Only
- small fish swim in schools." To the end, Isaac Bashevis Singer
- chose to swim alone. Leviathans always do.
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