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| Tattoo for a Slave | 
enlarge | Author: Hortense Calisher Publisher: Harvest Books Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $1.00 You Save: $13.00 (93%)
New (33) Used (26) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1621152
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 0156032031 Dewey Decimal Number: 809 EAN: 9780156032032 ASIN: 0156032031
Publication Date: November 7, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New - Never Opened. Fast, reliable delivery. Exceptional customer service. Selling books online since 1999. Standard shipping is USPS. Expedited shipping is UPS Ground. Expedited shipping will NOT deliver to HI, AK, PR, PO Boxes, APO/FPO.
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Product Description
A "tattoo" is a bugle call, a summoning that lingers in the ear. Although Hortense Calisher's family eventually migrated north to New York City, the echoes of their days as a slave-owning Jewish family in the South still resonate with this acclaimed author, who uncovers a part of history never before so strongly and tenderly revealed. Calisher traces her family's years in the South and their transformative move up north, beautifully evoking the mood and texture of the early twentieth century. Her Virginia-born father, a perfume manufacturer, was twenty-two years older than her German-born mother. Marked by longer-than-normal gaps between the generations and conflicts between the mercantile and the scholarly, the "American" and the emigre, her family is characterized by Calisher as "volcanic to meditative to fruitfully dull, and bound to produce someone interested in character, society, and time."
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| Customer Reviews:
Unnecessarily obscure, but interesting February 17, 2006 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
I am halfway through this book and, as one of the Amazon editorial reviews warns, as a first time reader of Calisher, I am finding myself somewhat lost.
There are wonderful sections on Calisher's family and her childhood, her parents' and grandparents' histories. But there are also pages and paragraphs so inscrutable that I am becoming frustrated.
At times I feel like I did in college, reading French literature in French that I only partially comprehended.
What's with Calisher? Is it her age (92) that makes her write this way? Does she have things to hide? The sections I've been reading from about page 120 onward about her first marriage are particularly obscure. I'm at page 160 now, and not sure if I plan to go on.
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