Editor’s Note
Ilan Stavans
Gimpel the Fool
Isaac Bashevis Singer
Translated from the Yiddish by Saul Bellow
Simple Gimpl
Isaac Bashevis Singer
Translated from the Yiddish by Isaac Bashevis Singer and David
Stromberg
Afterword
David Stromberg
גימפּל תּם
יצחק באַשעװיס זינגער
About the Author, Translators, and Illustrator
Isaac Bashevis Singer (19041991) was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1978. An immigrant from Poland, he arrived in New York following the steps of his older brother, Israel Joshua Singer. He wrote essays, stories, and other writings for the Forverts, at times under pseudonym. Saul Bellow translated his story "Gimpel the Fool," which heralded his talent for a young generation of American Jewish readers. For years Singer published his stories in The New Yorker, where he developed a distinct style. His numerous books include Satan in Goray (1935), Gimpel the Fool and Other Stories (1957), The Magician of Lublin (1960), The Slave (1962), The Spinoza of Market Street (1963), A Friend of Kafka and Other Stories (1970), Enemies, a Love Story (1972), Old Love (1979), and Shadows on the Hudson (1997). His work has been translated into dozens of languages.
Saul Bellow (1915 - 2005) was born of Russian Jewish parents in Lachine, Quebec, and was raised in Chicago. He received his bachelor's degree from Northwestern University in 1937. His novel The Adventures of Augie March won the National Book Award for fiction in 1954. His further awards include the Pulitzer Prize for Humboldt's Gift (1975); the International Literary Prize for Herzog, for which he became the first American recipient; and the Croix de Chevalier des Arts et Lettres, the highest literary distinction awarded by France to non-citizens. In 1976, Bellow was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Liana Finck is a regular contributor to The New Yorker, The Awl, and Catapult. She is a recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, and a Six Points Fellowship for Emerging Jewish Artists. She has had artist residencies with the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Tablet magazine. Her first book, A Bintel Brief, was published in 2014.
David Stromberg, a writer, translator, and literary scholar, is editor for the Isaac Bashevis Singer Literary Trust. His books include Baddies, Idiot Love and the Elements of Intimacy, and A Short Inquiry into the End of the World. He is the editor of Old Truths and New Cliches: Essays by Isaac Bashevis Singer (Princeton, 2022).
Praise for Isaac Bashevis Singer:“Singer’s stories have plots that
unravel not because they are old-fashioned—they are mostly
originals and have few recognizable modes other than their own—but
because they contain the whole human world of affliction, error,
quagmire, pain, calamity, catastrophe, woe: things happen; life is
an ambush, a snare; one’s fate can never be predicted. His driven,
mercurial processions of predicaments and transmogrifications are
limitless, a cornucopia of invention.”
—Cynthia Ozick“[Singer] is a spellbinder as clever as Scheherazade;
he arrests the reader at once, transports him to a far place and a
far, improbable time and does not let him go until the end.”
—Jean Stafford, The New Republic“A peerless storyteller, Singer
restores the sheer enchantment with story, with outcome, with
what-happens-next that has been denied most readers since their
adolescence.”
—David Boroff, Saturday Review“Singer is a genius. He has total
command of his imagined world.”
—Irving Howe, The New Republic“Extraordinarily beautiful… It's the
integrity of the human imagination that Singer conveys so
beautifully.”
—Alfred Kazin, The New Leader"[Singer’s]... impassioned narrative
art… with roots in a Polish-Jewish cultural tradition, brings
universal human conditions to life."
—The Nobel Prize Committee, 1978
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