On the Landing

Stories by Yenta Mash

Yenta Mash author Ellen Cassedy translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cornell University Press

Published:28th Sep '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

On the Landing cover

In these sixteen stories, available in English for the first time, prize-winning author Yenta Mash traces an arc across continents, across upheavals and regime changes, and across the phases of a woman's life. Mash's protagonists are often in transit, poised "on the landing" on their way to or from somewhere else. In imaginative, poignant, and relentlessly honest prose, translated from the Yiddish by Ellen Cassedy, Mash documents the lost world of Jewish Bessarabia, the texture of daily life behind the Iron Curtain in Soviet Moldova, and the challenges of assimilation in Israel. On the Landing opens by inviting us to join a woman making her way through her ruined hometown, recalling the colorful customs of yesteryear—and the night when everything changed. We then travel into the Soviet gulag, accompanying women prisoners into the fearsome forests of Siberia. In postwar Soviet Moldova, we see how the Jewish community rebuilds itself. On the move once more, we join refugees struggling to find their place in Israel. Finally, a late-life romance brings a blossoming of joy. Drawing on a lifetime of repeated uprooting, Mash offers an intimate perch from which to explore little-known corners of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. A master chronicler of exile, she makes a major contribution to the literature of immigration and resilience, adding her voice to those of Jhumpa Lahiri, W. G. Sebald, André Aciman, and Viet Thanh Nguyen. Mash's literary oeuvre is a brave achievement, and her work is urgently relevant today as displaced people seek refuge across the globe.

Ellen Cassedy has done marvelous work combing through Mash's four collections to select these stories and bringing them to life in an English that honors the beauty and texture of the author's vision. Highly recommended for all libraries.

* Association of Jewish Libraries Reviews *

Mash's compact stories draw from her difficult life—including her experiences in the Siberian gulag, her postwar decades in Kishinev and her immigration to Israel in the 1970s. These small gems give voice both to the insufficiently documented story of Jewish deportees in Siberia and to the unique experience of Bessarabian Jews.

* J. The Jewish News of Northern California *

Each story is a gem. Mash's narrative skill is quietly astonishing.

* Jewish Book Council *

Mash's collection keeps us alert to the riches to be discoveredshowing us the many worlds in which Yiddish thrived and suffered in the twentieth century.

* In Geveb *

Yenta Mash's stories are a must—a reminder that, through the persecutions in the Russian Pale, 'something very important has been lost,' but also that something strong survives.

* Foreword Reviews *

Dor ayn, dor oys, der emes blaybt! (From one generation to the next, the truth will out!)

* Yiddish Branzhe *

An important contribution... much appreciated.

* Yiddish Forverts *

Small gems.

* jweekly.com *

The stories provide nuanced insight into their perspectives and psychology, perhaps it is the extremity of many of the stories' settings that draws the reader's attention to the universal and away from the particular.

* Los Angeles Review of Boo

ISBN: 9780875807935

Dimensions: 203mm x 127mm x 11mm

Weight: 454g

192 pages