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The 2009 Award

 

The Ministry of Special Cases

The Ministry of Special Cases

by Nathan Englander

 

Nominated by:

  • San José Public Library, California, USA
  • Edmonton Public Library, Canada
  • Denver Public Library, Colorado, USA

Publisher of Nominated Edition:

Alfred A. Knopf

 

 

the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors
ABOUT THE BOOK

The long-awaited novel from Nathan Englander, author of For the Relief of Unbearable Urges. Englander’s wondrous and much-heralded collection of stories won the 2000 Pen/Malamud Award and was translated into more than a dozen languages.

From its unforgettable opening scene in the darkness of a forgotten cemetery in Buenos Aires, The Ministry of Special Cases casts a powerful spell. In the heart of Argentina’s Dirty War, Kaddish Poznan struggles with a son who won’t accept him; strives for a wife who forever saves him; and spends his nights protecting the good name of a community that denies his existence--and denies a checkered history that only Kaddish holds dear. When the nightmare of the disappeared children brings the Poznan family to its knees, they are thrust into the unyielding corridors of the Ministry of Special Cases, the refuge of last resort.

Nathan Englander’s first novel is a timeless story of fathers and sons. In a world turned upside down, where the past and the future, the nature of truth itself, all take shape according to a corrupt government’s whims, one man--one spectacularly hopeless man--fights to overcome his history and his name, and, if for only once in his life, to put things right. Here again are all the marvelous qualities for which Englander’s first book was immediately beloved: his exuberant wit and invention, his cosmic sense of the absurd, his genius for balancing joyfulness and despair. Through the devastation of a single family, Englander captures, indelibly, the grief of a nation. The Ministry of Special Cases, like Englander’s stories before it, is a celebration of our humanity, in all its weakness, and--despite that--hope.

(From Publisher).

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nathan Englander’s short fiction has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, and numerous anthologies, including The Best American Short Stories and The O. Henry Prize Stories. Englander’s story collection, For the Relief of Unbearable Urges, earned him a PEN/Malamud Award and the SueKaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He lives in New York City.

LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS

Suggested by a number of readers who were struck by Englander's Kafkaesque tale about oppression set in Argentina during the Dirty War of the 1970’s.

Set in Argentina during the Dirty War of the 1970's, a family is torn apart by their outcast Jewish ancestry, generational differences and a volatile political environment. Englander has skilfully written his debut novel with heartbreaking beauty and power.

 

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