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The human stain  Cover Image Book Book

The human stain / Philip Roth.

Roth, Philip. (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 0618059458
  • Physical Description: 361 p. ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 2000.

Content descriptions

Target Audience Note:
Adult
Subject: Passing (Identity) > Fiction.
African American men > Fiction.
Jewish men > Fiction.
College teachers > Fiction.
Newark (N.J.) > Fiction.
Genre: Psychological fiction.
Topic Heading: Connecticut author

Available copies

  • 34 of 34 copies available at Bibliomation.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 34 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Babcock Library - Ashford F Rot (Text) 33110143464285 Adult Fiction Available -
Beekley Community Library - New Hartford F ROTH, P. (Text) 32544072846628 Adult Fiction Available -
Bethel Public Library F ROTH (Text) 34030084843900 Adult Fiction Available -
Burnham Library - Bridgewater FIC ROTH (Text) 36937002032572 Adult Fiction Available -
Chester Public Library ROT (Text) 33210000111944 Adult Fiction Available -
Deep River Public Library F Roth (Text) 36039000253779 Adult Fiction Available -
Derby Neck Library FIC ROT (Text) 34046083620453 Adult Fiction Available -
Douglas Library - North Canaan F ROT (Text) 33490000226070 Adult Fiction Available -
Douglas Library of Hebron FIC ROT (Text) 33400000434058 Adult Fiction Available -
Easton Public Library FIC ROTH, PHILIP (Text) 37777007002660 Adult Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0618059458
The Human Stain
The Human Stain
by Roth, Philip
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Kirkus Review

The Human Stain

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Roth's extraordinary recent productivity (the prizewinning Sabbath's Theater, 1995, and American Pastoral, 1997) continues apace with this impressively replete and very moving chronicle of an academic scandal and its impact on both the aging professor at its center and his friend'alter ego novelist Nathan Zuckerman. In the turbulent summer of 1998 (while the country reacts with prurient dismay to the Bill Clinton'Monica Lewinsky mess), Coleman Silk, classics teacher and Dean of Faculty at New England's Athena College, innocently uses the word ``spook'' (correctly, as it happens) in class, and is immediately accused of racism. His career and reputation are in ruins, his wife dies as a result of the ensuing emotional trauma, and Silk becomes estranged from his several adult children. Then, his ``exploitative'' ongoing affair with Faunia Farley, a passive cleaning woman less than half his age, is discovered. Zuckerman, in whom Coleman has confided, befriends him, hears him out'then, following the last of the story's several climaxes, sedulously ``reconstructs'' his beleaguered friend's history (``I am forced to imagine. It happens to be what I do for a living''). There's another secret in Coleman's past'and Zuckerman/Roth teases it out and explores its consequences in a back-and-forth narrative filled with surprises that strains plausibility severely, while simultaneously involving us deeply with its vividly imagined characters. In addition to Coleman Silk (whose arrogance and secretiveness in no way lessen our respect for him), Roth creates telling and unusually full characterizations of the semiliterate Faunia (both a pathetic victim of circumstance and a formidably strong woman); her angry ex-husband Les, a Vietnam vet crippled by post-traumatic stress disorder; and even Delphine Roux, Coleman's single-minded feminist colleague, and his most dedicated enemy. And in the long elegiac final scene, Zuckerman contrives a resolution that may confer forgiveness on them all. A marvel of imaginative empathy, generosity, and tact. Roth's late maturity looks more and more like his golden age.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 0618059458
The Human Stain
The Human Stain
by Roth, Philip
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Publishers Weekly Review

The Human Stain

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Roth almost never fails to surprise. After a clunky beginning, in which crusty Nathan Zuckerman is carrying on about the orgy of sanctimoniousness surrounding Clinton's Monica misadventures, his new novel settles into what would seem to be patented Roth territory. Coleman Silk, at 71 a distinguished professor at a small New England college, has been harried from his position because of what has been perceived as a racist slur. His life is ruined: his wife succumbs under the strain, his friends are forsaking him, and he is reduced to an affair with 34-year-old Faunia Farley, the somber and illiterate janitor at the college. It is at this point that Zuckerman, Roth's novelist alter ego, gets to know and like Silk and to begin to see something of the personal and sexual liberation wrought in him by the unlikely affair with Faunia. It is also the point at which Faunia's estranged husband Les Farley, a Vietnam vet disabled by stress, drugs and drink, begins to take an interest in the relationship. So far this is highly intelligent, literate entertainment, with a rising tension. Will Les do something violent? Will Delphine Roux, the young French professor Silk had hired, who has come to hate him, escalate the college's campaign against him? Yes, but she now wants to make something of his Faunia relationship too. Then, in a dazzling coup, Roth turns all expectations on their heads, and begins to show Silk in a new and astounding light, as someone who has lived a huge lie all his life, making the fuss over his alleged racism even more surreal. The book continues to unfold layer after layer of meaning. There is a tragedy, as foretold, and an exquisitely imagined ending in which Zuckerman himself comes to feel both threatened and a threat. Roth is working here at the peak of his imaginative skills, creating many scenes at once sharply observed and moving: Faunia's affinity for the self-contained remoteness of crows, Farley's profane longing for a cessation to the tumult in his head, Zuckerman delightedly dancing with Silk to the big band tunes of their youth. He even brings off virtuoso passages that are superfluous but highly impressive, like his dissection of the French professor's lonely anguish in the States. This is a fitting capstone to the trilogy that includes American Pastoral and I Married a Communist--a book more balanced and humane than either, and bound, because of its explosive theme, to be widely discussed. 100,000 first printing. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 0618059458
The Human Stain
The Human Stain
by Roth, Philip
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BookList Review

The Human Stain

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

With the help of his alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, Roth continues the inquiry into the state of the American soul during the second half of the twentieth-century. Fueled by the story of his magnetic hero, Coleman Silk, it roars, with heart-revving velocity, through a literary landscape that embraces the politics of race and sex, the Vietnam War, and the absurdity of extreme political correctness, the dumbing down of the academy, and President Clinton's impeachment. Coleman, a classics professor at a small Berkshire college, embodies all the ambition, paradox, anger, and futility of the American dream, and, over the course of his secretive life, he displays all the mettlesome powers of the Greek and Roman gods he helps immortalize. Naturally, a man this fired up makes enemies, and no one defends him when his brilliant career capsizes over a misunderstanding regarding his use of the word spooks to refer to students who failed to materialize in the classroom. How was he to know they were black? How was anyone to know that he would be the last professor on earth to make a racist remark? Enraged by the inanity of the ensuing brouhaha, Coleman resigns. Then, when his wife dies unexpectedly, he becomes involved with a woman who is half his age and illiterate. These unlikely lovers are surely doomed, and Zuckerman seems destined to discover the truth about Coleman, which reveals so many truths about the land he so passionately portrays. As Roth unfurls his hero's galvanizing tale, he protests the tyranny of prejudice and propriety, recognizes the "terrifyingly provisional nature of everything," and shakes his head in sorrow and wonder over the "inevitably stained creatures that we are." --Donna Seaman


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