Call It Sleep
Home    Store Policies    View Cart    Contact Us

Search Our Inventory

Current Category
Audiobooks
   Literature & Fiction

All Categories


Call It Sleep

Call It Sleep
(Larger Image)

Call It Sleep

by Henry Roth (Narrator: George Guidall)
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Recorded Books Unabridged (2002-03)
ISBN: 078870091X
EAN: 9780788700910
Dewey Decimal #: 741
Audio Cassette
SKU: 01RB-009-7-1107
Condition: G- Jews -- New York
Comments: UNABRIDGED; EX-LIBRARY with typical stickers and markings; 12 audiocassettes in original plastic case; Case shows typical wear, with some rubbing, soiling, a few small corner cracks, etc. Everything appears to be in order; While we cannot test our thousands of hours of media, we guarantee them to play well. Narrated by George Guidall. *International Buyers Welcome!* (except for prohibitively heavy items, as noted) - Satisfied customers in over 40 countries! We ship quickly and guarantee satisfaction. Your purchase helps support a U. Chicago student


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
'One of the few genuinely distinguished novels written by a twentieth-century American.' -Irving Howe, The New York Times Book Review When Henry Roth published his debut novel Call It Sleep in 1934, it was greeted with considerable critical acclaim though, in those troubled times, lackluster sales. Only with its paperback publication thirty years later did thisnovel receive the recognition it deserves-and still enjoys. Having sold-to-date millions of copies worldwide, CallIt Sleepis the magnificent story of David Schearl, the'dangerously imaginative' child coming of age in the slums of New York.


Customer Reviews


insight to an era
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-08-29


After hearing about this book from the movie "The Stone Reader" I couldn't wait to get my hands on it. It is a wonderful insight to an era in America for immigrants. I loved spending time with the characters even when I didn't like some of them. The prose was beautiful to read as a translation from the yiddish and polish, the reading was hard and slow when spoken in the characters broken english.
It is a great read and a good reminder to all of us what it was like to be an immigrant, young, and innocent in a new country.


Ditto
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-07-30


I don't know what more I can add to the fine reviews already written here, other than to say, "Ditto." This is a truly literary novel, a small vignette in the big picture depicted in our American tapestry of culture, race and religion. It is a stark depiction at times, and at times disturbing, but the image created rings true, as do the characters. Highly recommended for the intellectual reader.


An undeniable classic
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-06-03


When Henry Roth's novel Call it Sleep was published in 1934 it was hailed by some critics and readers as a minor masterpiece. Indeed, this is one of the best novels about our immigrant experience. Mr. Roth's compassion for his characters, his intense narrative force, and his wonderful ear for dialectic speech and poetry is evident throughout Call it Sleep. A simple story of an immigrant Jewish family during the years 1911 to about 1913, it centers on a boy named David Schearl, who lives on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, his feuding parents, his street friends and some relatives. At times its scenes of domestic strife may get wearisome to the reader, but then Roth introduces the colorful Aunt Bertha, who has a different temperament than David's gentle mother, and the fireworks begin. She is a loud, course, stout and an outspoken woman who never hesitates to stand up to her sister's bitter, argumentative husband. Their hard life reaches a climax during an ugly family fight wherein David, fearing his father's rage, runs away. He soon finds himself hiding in a train yard, but comes close to being electrocuted. He survives his harrowing experience and is brought home to his worried parents.

The beauty of Call it Sleep lies in Mr. Roth's power of description and his deep understanding of people. The images he conjures of his old Lower East Side neighborhood, its struggling people, busy streets and loud sounds, its smells and relentless drama all come alive. Some readers may find this somewhat lengthy novel confusing at times, with several passages difficult to understand, and its dialog undecipherable when Roth weaves speech, narration and poetry into a confusing jumble, but Call it Sleep is terrific reading. An excellent introduction by Alfred Kazin and an afterward by Hanna Wirth-Nesher, a language scholar, proclaim it a masterpiece of language and literature. Most readers will happily agree.


Perhaps the best American novel in the 20th century
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-12-17

1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful


A reading group I belong to suggested Gatsby as the best American novel. It is very fine, but I retorted that Call It Sleep was finer -- then I ordered it and read it again after 40 years. I stick with my opinion.


Depict one character perfectly; the rest will follow.
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-06-16

4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful


Henry Roth wants to do two things well in this book: first, accurately describe the experience of being a child -- not a tough, bully-type child, but a shy kid with no friends. (I can relate.) Secondly, he wants to capture the language spoken by native New Yorkers and by immigrants to the city.

It might be best to explain the book's trick as "inside versus outside." Most of the time, we stand in a position of semi-omniscience, much like in Crime and Punishment: while the godlike narrator in Crime and Punishment could see inside Raskolnikov's head and no one else's, we are allowed into David Schearl's mind while he wanders terrified through the world. David understands perfectly well why he's so scared, and by the end so do we -- but we also understand why he can't explain his terror to anyone else. We are trapped in the child's head with him. It's been a very long time -- probably since I was David's age -- since I've remembered those feelings.

The language of New York's Jewish ghettoes in Call It Sleep also has an inside and an outside, and Roth's great trick is to pull us so deeply into that world that it's a slap on the face when we're back outside. The immigrants talk to one another in their native Yiddish, in which there's great poetry and biblical allusion (as well as more than a few "may your remaining days be dark"-type curses). We're steeped in that world. Only occasionally do the immigrants step outside and talk haltingly with, say, a local policeman. They are shy, awkward, and adrift. Roth is so ingenious in the delivery that we feel their shyness and awkwardness as though it were our own.

It's rare to find a book that is so committed to its characters. Roth has no ulterior motive. He just wants to introduce us to this little community and its little people. If we happen to see larger meanings or other people in those he depicts, it's accidental. That sort of devotion to character is extremely rare. I can only imagine how absorbed in the characters Roth must have been, if he drew his reader in that completely.

Retail Price: $87.00
Our Price:$20.00
That's 77% Off!




Questions about any of our books? Would you like us to send you additional photographs? You are invited to contact us!

rwnye@masstraderbooks.com
(231) 670-6424
 

Masstrader Books
1657 S. Getty St., Ste. #6
Muskegon, MI 49442
rwnye@masstraderbooks.com

Roger W. Nye, Proprietor
231-670-6424

David G. Nye
Webmaster, Manager ad-interim
231-670-6807
Official PayPal Seal