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    Chicken Dreaming Corn

    by Roy Hoffman


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      ISBN-13: 9780820340081
    • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
    • Publication date: 01/15/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 256
    • File size: 2 MB

    Roy Hoffman is the author of the novel Almost Family, winner of the Lillian Smith Award for fiction, and the nonfiction collection, Back Home. A native of Mobile, Alabama, he worked in New York City for twenty years as a journalist, speechwriter, and teacher, before returning to the South as staff writer at the Mobile Register. Hoffman's reviews and essays have appeared in the New York Times, Fortune, Southern Living, and other publications. He lives in Fairhope, Alabama, and travels to Louisville, Kentucky, where he teaches in the brief-residency MFA in Writing Program at Spalding University.

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    In 1916, on the immigrant blocks of the Southern port city of Mobile, Alabama, a Romanian Jewish shopkeeper, Morris Kleinman, is sweeping his walk in preparation for the Confederate veterans parade about to pass by. "Daddy?" his son asks, "are we Rebels?" "Today?" muses Morris. "Yes, we are Rebels." Thus opens a novel set, like many, in a languid Southern town. But, in a rarity for Southern novels, this one centers on a character who mixes Yiddish with his Southern and has for his neighbors small merchants from Poland, Lebanon, and Greece.

    As Morris resides with his family over his Dauphin Street store, enjoys cigars with his Cuban friend Pablo Pastor, and makes "a living not a killing," his tale begins with glimpses of the old Confederacy, continues through a tumultuous Armistice Day, and leads up to the hard-won victories of World War II. Along the way Morris sells shoes and sofas and endures Klan violence, religious zealotry, and financial triumphs and heartbreaks. With his devoted Miriam, who nurses memories of Brooklyn and Romania, he raises four adventurous children whose own journeys take them to New Orleans and Atlanta and involve romance, ambition and tragic loss.


    At turns lyrical, comic, and melancholy, this tale takes inspiration from its title. This Romanian expression with an Alabama twist is symbolic of the strivings of ordinary folks for sustenance, for the realization of their hopes and dreams. Set largely on a few humble blocks yet engaging many parts of the world, this Southern Jewish novel is, ultimately, richly American.

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    Kirkus Reviews
    The sorrows and joys of a Romanian Jew who settles in Mobile, Alabama, early in the 20th century. Morris Kleinman got used to pulling up roots at an early age-which may explain why he became so fond of the first place he managed stay put in for any length of time. Born in Romania to a family of pious rural Jews, he is forced to leave home as a child when pogroms deprive his father of a livelihood and the children are farmed out to relatives and sympathetic friends. Morris goes to live with a kindly Christian farmer, then eventually leaves Romania and makes his way to New York, where he meets his future wife, Miriam, in a Brooklyn deli. After their marriage, Miriam and Morris move to Mobile, and there, in 1907, Morris opens a general store. A port city with a sizable immigrant community, Mobile is fairly hospitable to outsiders, though there are occasional tensions between Morris and his overwhelmingly Christian clientele. Still, he's happy in Mobile, making friends and raising four children there. Second-novelist Hoffman's (Almost Family, not reviewed) tale is leisurely and somewhat meandering, following the small family dramas and local excitements with grace and sensitivity. Largely, it's a study in character: Morris the small-town boy grown up as wily survivor; his nervous and fatalistic wife, Miriam; her ne'er-do-well brother Benny; and the two Kleinman boys, who both grow up to become classic, impatient, second-generation immigrant sons. At the close, in the late 1940s, Morris's family is poised to move into mainstream Mobile society-which itself stands ready to change out of all recognition in the years to come. A homely and unambitious tale that succeeds in part through its lack ofpretension: an amiable and moving portrait of family life and small-town history. Agent: Joelle Delbourgo/Joelle Delbourgo Associates, Inc.
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