About the Author:
Esther Kreitman (1891-1954) was born in Bilgoray, Poland, and is the sister of renowned Yiddish writers Israel Joshua and Isaac Bashevis Singer. Raised in Warsaw and married in Antwerp, Kreitman and her family fled to London at the start of World War I. She is the author of two novels and a collection of short stories.
Review:
"A daring feat. . . Recommended for all libraries."
Library Journal starred review
"Kreitman's opus is an important contribution to the vastly neglected genre of feminist Yiddish literature." Booklist
"Above all, the sheer story-telling skill of Kreitman's prose reminds us how past worlds are evoked through detail, practical reminders of daily lives and customs which no longer exist."
The Jewish Quarterly
"I do not know of a single woman in Yiddish literature who wrote better than she did."
Isaac Bashevis Singer
"The reappearance of this novel will be welcomed by students of Jewish and Yiddish literature and 20th-century feminist writing. Summing up: Recommended."
Choice
"Kreitman's writing is clear, marvelously descriptive and occasionally evocative. . . A wonderful introduction by Ilan Stavans and comprehensive afterword by Anita Norich draw the parallels with Esther Kreitman's life and place the book in historical perspective."
Jewish Book World
"[Kreitman] clearly has the same deep, haunting literary storyteller's gifts as her siblings."
Lilith
"This new edition, with its timely critical reappraisal of Kreitman's place in her famous family as well as [The Dance of the Demons's] place in Yiddish literature, marks a long overdue effort to translate the rest of Kreitman's work, and is still, after so many decades, a haunting and haunted book."
The Jewish Reader
"[A] truthful and delicate portrait."
Canadian Jewish News
"A daring feat. . . Recommended for all libraries."
―Library Journal starred review
"Kreitman's opus is an important contribution to the vastly neglected genre of feminist Yiddish literature." ―Booklist
"Above all, the sheer story-telling skill of Kreitman's prose reminds us how past worlds are evoked through detail, practical reminders of daily lives and customs which no longer exist."
―The Jewish Quarterly
"I do not know of a single woman in Yiddish literature who wrote better than she did."
―Isaac Bashevis Singer
"The reappearance of this novel will be welcomed by students of Jewish and Yiddish literature and 20th-century feminist writing. Summing up: Recommended."
―Choice
"Kreitman's writing is clear, marvelously descriptive and occasionally evocative. . . A wonderful introduction by Ilan Stavans and comprehensive afterword by Anita Norich draw the parallels with Esther Kreitman's life and place the book in historical perspective."
―Jewish Book World
"[Kreitman] clearly has the same deep, haunting literary storyteller's gifts as her siblings."
―Lilith
"This new edition, with its timely critical reappraisal of Kreitman's place in her famous family as well as [The Dance of the Demons's] place in Yiddish literature, marks a long overdue effort to translate the rest of Kreitman's work, and is still, after so many decades, a haunting and haunted book."
―The Jewish Reader
"[A] truthful and delicate portrait."
―Canadian Jewish News
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.