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An American Type Henry Roth

An American Type By Henry Roth

An American Type by Henry Roth


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Summary

The author of the greatest American immigrant novel, Call It Sleep, returns with this posthumous work.

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An American Type Summary

An American Type: A Novel by Henry Roth

Henry Roth's final novel, An American Type, is nothing short of a miracle, a lyrical work of immense poignancy from a writer whose biographical story has no parallel in American literature. Roth, best known for his towering immigrant novel Call It Sleep, emerged from a literary hibernation of 60 years in 1994 with Mercy of a Rude Stream, a fictional quartet that would be hailed by as a landmark of the American literary century. In contrast to Roth's previous novels, An American Type is a both a love story and a lamentation, the final fruit of nearly 2,000 unpublished pages that Roth composed in the last years of his life. The manuscript rested undisturbed in an office file for over a decade before it was sent to Willing Davidson, then a young assistant in the Fiction Department of The New Yorker, who with a growing sense of discovery and elation, recognized that this unpublished manuscript possessed astonishing vigor.

Set in the dire year of 1938, the novel reintroduces us to Roth's alter-ego, Ira Stigman, a 32-year-old novelist, eager to assimilate but psychologically traumatized by the scars of his impoverished immigrant past. Restless with his older lover and literary mentor, the renowned English professor, Edith Welles, whose obsessive love has crippled him, Ira, a slum-born Yiddle, journeys to Yaddo, the famed writer's colony, where he meets a blond, aristocratic pianist, whose inherent nobility and calm, Anglo-Saxon radiance engages him.

The ensuing romantic crisis, as well as the conflict between his ghetto Jewish roots and the bourgeois comforts of Manhattan, forces Ira to abandon the comforts of his paramour's Greenwich Village apartment. In his relentless search to become a writer, a husband and an American, Ira heads West with an illiterate, boorish Communist, on an illusory quest for the promise of the American West. Thumbing rides from gruff truckers, riding the rails with hobos through the Dust Bowl, Ira explores America's inherent splendors and its Depression tragedies as he returns home, uncertain if he will marry M., questioning if he'll ever be able to make anything of his lapidary prose.

Set against crumbling piers and glimmering skyscrapers in Manhattan, against seedy motor courts and tufted palm trees in sun-soaked Los Angeles, An American Type is not only, perhaps, the last first-hand testament of the Depression, but also a universal statement about the constant reinvention of American identity, and, with its lyrical ending, the transcendence of love.

An American Type Reviews

Starred Review: A passionate, life-embracing conclusion to Roth's bold and cathartic magnum opus. -- Booklist
[A] glorious, evocative, literary novel for the ages. -- The Los Angeles Times

About Henry Roth

Henry Roth (1906-1995) spent his early years on Manhattan's Lower East Side. In 1914, the Roth family moved to Jewish Harlem. Roth died in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Willing Davidson is a fiction editor at The New Yorker.

Additional information

CIN0393077756VG
9780393077759
0393077756
An American Type: A Novel by Henry Roth
Used - Very Good
Hardback
WW Norton & Co
20100729
304
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - An American Type