The Five Books of Moses Lapinsky
- Publisher
- Talonbooks
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2010
- Category
- Jewish, Historical, Literary
- Recommended Age
- 15
- Recommended Grade
- 10
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780889226463
- Publish Date
- Sep 2010
- List Price
- $14.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
In 2003, a mild-mannered historian named Moses Lapinsky jots down notes for a biography. It is to tell the tale of his father Sonny, a famous Jewish- Canadian boxer. As Moses buries himself in his research, he is transported back in time to the pivotal events of his father’s life. So begins the first of the five sections of the novel, each narrated by a different third person. Crammed with humour, sorrow, folly, bravery and the richness of the everyday, Tulchinsky traces the remarkable fortunes of generations of the Lapinsky family, bringing life to the character of an entire community.
August 1933: a sweltering Toronto night. At Christie Pits Park, during the ninth inning of an amateur-league softball game, four youths unfurl a white sheet emblazoned with a large black Swastika, lift their arms and shout, “Heil Hitler!” Within seconds, a group of Jewish youths charge in a struggle to capture the flag, setting off a four-hour race riot (the largest ever to occur, before or since, in Toronto), involving fifteen thousand people and injuring hundreds.
The riot at Christie Pits Park was the culmination of weeks of political and racial tension. Tulchinsky has re-created this and other defining historical moments in vivid detail, taking us inside the life of one immigrant Jewish family. We trace the fortunes of the Lapinskys—in particular the four sons—from the pivotal moment of the riots, through the years of the Great Depression, the rise of fascism and all its attendant social tensions, World War II, into the post-war era that began to emerge in the early 1950s. A stunning, engaging and moving fictional treatment of a defining moment for a family, a city, a nation and a continent struggling with ideas of freedom, tolerance and identity in a world broken by war.
About the author
Aren X. Tulchinsky is the award-winning author of Love Ruins Everything (Press Gang Publishers), a novel that was named one of the top ten books of 1998 by the Bay Area Reporter and has been translated into German and French; its sequel, Love and Other Ruins (Polestar); and In Her Nature (Women’s Press), a collection of short fiction which won the 1996 VanCity Book Prize.His screenplays have been short-listed in the Praxis Screenwriting competition and the Los Angeles-based Chesterfield Film Company Writer’s Project. He is a graduate of the prestigious Canadian Film Centre’s Professional Screenwriting Programme, where he wrote two feature-length screenplays and a short film, Straight in the Face, which debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival and was broadcast on Showcase TV.Tulchinksy has written for numerous magazines and newspapers, including the Vancouver Sun, Georgia Straight, Now Magazine, Xtra West, Canadian Screenwriter and the National Post, and has taught creative writing at Langara College and Screenwriting at the UBC Writing Centre.
Awards
- Vancouver Public Library One Book, One Vancouver Award
- Short-listed, Toronto Book Awards
Editorial Reviews
“Karen X. Tulchinsky’s latest novel might be considered old-fashioned in the very best sense; it’s got lots of heart.”
— National Post
“A highly entertaining, well-written and worthwhile piece of work.” — Toronto Sun
Librarian Reviews
The Five Books of Moses Lapinsky
What begins as a fictional biography of Sonny “The Charger” Lapinsky, middleweight boxing champion, written by his son Moses, is actually a multi-generational story of the men in the Lapinsky family. Searching for a better life in Depression-era Toronto, Yakov, a Russian Jew, raises his four sons on the pennies he earns as a peddler. But, it is the race riot at Christie Pits that defines the events of this story. Left alone at the riot, Izzy, the sweet-faced five-year-old, is injured, rendering him permanently intellectually damaged. Each member of the family struggles with his own guilt and shame in relation to this tragedy. The themes of WWII, the experiences of Jewish Canadians, as well as family guilt, shame and dysfunction are addressed in this novel.Tulchinsky’s previous works are Love and Other Ruins and Love Ruins Everything.
Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. BC Books for BC Schools. 2011-2012.