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Hardcover Almost Perfect Moment, An: A Novel Book

ISBN: 0060520868

ISBN13: 9780060520861

Almost Perfect Moment, An: A Novel

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

On the cusp of the great age of disco, and in a part of Brooklyn a million miles away from Manhattan, livesfifteen-year-old Valentine Kessler and her long-suffering mother, Miriam.

Valentine -- Jewish, pretty, and a touch flaky -- is an unremarkable teenager except for two things: she is a dead ringer for the Virgin Mary as she appeared to Bernadette at Lourdes, and her very being, through some inexplicable conspiracy of fate, seems to shatter the dreams and hopes of people around her.

John Wosileski, Valentine's lonely math teacher who adores her from afar, embraces the martyrdom wrought by his unconditional and unrequited love. Joanne Clarke, the bitter and sad biology teacher who schemes to be John's wife, reviles Valentine to eventual self-destruction. Valentine's best friend, a former figure-skating champion, humiliates her for the crime of being "different."

But Miriam Kessler -- betrayed and anguished by the husband she once worshipped -- --loves Valentine only the way a mother could -- deeply, yet without knowing. Transposing one sensual appetite for another, Miriam eats and eats and seeks solace in a daily game of mah-jongg with her three girlfriends. The Girls, a cross between a Greek Chorus and a Brooklyn rendition of the Three Wise Men, dispense advice, predictions, and care in the form of extravagant gifts and homemade strudels. When Miriam's greatest fear for Valentine is realized, she takes comfort in the thought that it couldn't get any worse. But then something even stranger happens, and Valentine's mysterious presence becomes an even more mysterious absence.

Written in a naturalistic voice that echoes that of the characters, An Almost Perfect Moment is a dark and sharply comic novel about star-crossed lovers, mothers and daughters, doctrines of the divine, and a colorful Jewish community that once defined Brooklyn. Sagacious, sorrowful, and hilarious, it raises questions of faith and plays with the possibility of miracles with one eye on the caution: Be careful what you wish for.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An amazing read

This latest novel from Kirshenbaum is truly remarkable. I loved the ways in which she writes about both the needs of the community and the problems faced by the individuals within it. I was particularly intrigued by the questions she raised, such as: What is the price of religious curiosity in a Jewish community? What must a community, Jewish or otherwise, do to preserve itself? This book was particularly enjoyable after having read her previous ones, such as "A Disturbance In One Place," "History On A Personal Note," and "Hester Among the Ruins." Instead of focusing on a single, first-person narrator, she writes about multiple, varied protagonists. If you liked her older work, however, never fear! Kirshenbaum deals with the same issues--guilt, sex, religion, identity through community--that are so prevalent in her earlier books, only shifts the focus to a smaller scope. Her voice, too, is still distinctive in its humor, candor, and empathy. I would recommend this to anyone; a really intriguing, enjoyable read.

An almost perfect novel

This is an almost perfect novel that reminds me of the Beatle's song, "All the lonely people.." The author allows herself inside each character, and captures them rejecting intimacy and friendship even as they long for it. The mah jong players love and support for one another is real sisterhood in the days just before women's lib hit Brooklyn. The anthropologists view of the 70's in Canarsie is humorous. Poingant and uplifting at the same time. Much better than her last novel, Hester Among the Ruins, which was also quite good.

A Perfect Book

Binnie Kirshenbaum's latest novel is the funniest yet most poignant book I've read this year. From the hilarity of a Jewish teenager who looks like the Virgin Mary and sings the "Ave Maria" in a Brooklyn accent, extra r's included, to the gutwrenching portrayals of pathetic schoolteachers whose lonely lives draw our sympathies despite their often distasteful personalities, Kirshenbaum dazzles the reader with her insight into the human condition. What seems at first to be just a comic novel by the end is profoundly sad, and this is what impresses the most. You will recognize yourself in this wonderful novel. And wish you hadn't.

A Tour de Force

What an engaging hoot this book is! The characters, the language, and the braiding of the narrative voice with both challenges comparison. The two funniest books I've read until this one have been Buckley's "Thank You for Smoking" and Bing's "Lloyd: What Happened." But these two were satires by journeymen writers. Kirshenbaum's book is comedic literature that masterfully captures personalities and behaviors way beyond what the other two, delights though they are, even attempt. Moreover, I found it full of surprises. Everything that I knew was going to happen didn't. So much for my insightful forecasting. And for those who become as captivated by this book as I am, let me urge you to also read Kirshenbaum's "Hester Among the Ruins" and Myla Goldberg's "Bee Season."

An Almost Perfect Moment is a truly perfect book!

This book grabbed me on page one and never let go. With rich characters and an intriguing plot that can be taken on different levels, Kirshenbaum has created a world that you will be thinking about long after you've turned the last page. Get your hands on this beautiful, funny, and flawless book!
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