Edition |
First edition. |
Description |
266 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm |
Summary |
Braff's second novel, following The Unthinkable Thoughts of Jacob Green (2004), posits an interfamilial culture clash of epic proportions. In 1975, 16-year-old David Arbus, a photography buff about to graduate from high school, is fed up with attempting to straddle the chasm that separates his divorced parents' radically different worlds. His mother, a recent convert to a Hasidic sect, insists that David follow suit, while his father, who owns and operates a Times Square burlesque house, encourages his son to join him in the family business. Most 16-year-old boys would find this choice an easy one to make, and so does David, but he fails to foresee both the agony of separation from his mother and younger sister and the shocking similarity he will find in the two worlds. His father?drawing a rigid moral line between striptease and stripper and refusing to add a new revenue stream by installing peep shows in the lobby--turns out to be every bit as much a purist as his mother. Meanwhile, as David sits in the male-only room at a Hasidic gathering and peeks through the curtain separating men from women, he realizes that peep shows come in more than one variety--Booklist. |
Subject |
Teenage boys -- Fiction.
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Fathers and sons -- Fiction.
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Jewish families -- Fiction.
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Vocational guidance -- Fiction.
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Pornography -- Fiction.
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Genre/Form |
Jewish fiction.
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ISBN |
9781565125087 |
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1565125088 |
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