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The Yiddish Policemen's Union | 
enlarge | Author: Michael Chabon Publisher: HarperPerennial Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £3.04 You Save: £4.95 (62%)
New (21) Used (9) from £2.75
Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 1059
Media: Paperback Pages: 464 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 1.2
ISBN: 0007150938 EAN: 9780007150939 ASIN: 0007150938
Publication Date: March 3, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: perfect condition
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Could the Messiah be a Junkie? August 7, 2008 Imita (Surrey, England) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The Yiddish Policeman's Union is all you have left when you are de-badged by your ex-wife in the Sitka, Alaska police force. Why no badge? Why are you still policing, sometimes in your underpants, as part of the frozen chosen? The YPU exists in a place where myths influence reality and jostle with humour, prodigal children, prejudices and wise cracks. Like many officials, Detective Meyer Landsman is under pressure to close and file cases tidily but the hitman style murder of former chess prodigy Mendel Shpilman and bestower of `miracles' in the flea pit of a hotel Landsman also resides in ,does not sit well in the tidy pile. This is a case Meyer can't leave alone, especially when he finds that Shpilman knew his recently deceased sister. For me, the pace varies at times, I raced through the initial chapters however towards the end I was thinking phew! this is nearly over. This is my first Chabon novel so I'm not sure if this the norm or the exception? Hope you are intrigued enough to take a punt. Read it, if you enjoy being out of cosy novel and love being taken somewhere where you least expect.
Noir, science fiction and literature - a heavy meal June 1, 2008 J. H. Bretts 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Michael Chabon can write brilliantly and I found myself rereading some of the breathtaking prose in this novel which mixes a Raymond Chandler-style detective story with alternative history. Unfortunately, it could have done with about 50-100 pages lopped off because it went on far too long!
Frustrating April 30, 2008 Mrs. K. A. Wheatley (Leicester, UK) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Kavalier & Clay is one of my all time favourite books, and when this came out I pounced on it in eager anticipation of a fabulous read. I have to say I was slightly disappointed. Chabon's story telling style is still epic and at times very funny, even in a fairly bleak book like this and there were moments of great beauty and insight that made me light up inside and go 'oooh', but on the whole it was incredibly hard work. The story revolves around the idea that part of Alaska has been ceded to the dispossessed Jews after WWII on the proviso that they only have it for sixty years and when that time is up they have to find somewhere else to go. The story starts just as the lease is about to expire. Meyer Landsman, a Jewish cop, has made a mess of his life and is living on vodka and cigarettes in a flophouse. A body in the same hostel turns his life around as he races to discover the murderer against the political clock ticking loudly in the background. The basic cop story is traditional but done with this Jewish Noir twist that makes it extraordinary. It was however, extremely hard work if you are not Jewish or don't know much about Jewish life and lore, which I don't. There were quite a few things I didn't understand and which rather than break the flow and keep looking up every five minutes I decided to hope would become explicable as the book moved on. Some do, some don't, but it was quite frustrating, at times like reading a book in another language altogether. Because of this it took me a long time to get into the story and I didn't really pick up the pace until nearly half way through. It's testament to Chabon's ability that I stuck with it that long, as with other books I would have been tempted to give up. As it is, the plot pulls you along nicely to the end and things become a lot more understandable as the book goes on.
Stylish Thriller, Unique Setting March 19, 2008 Quicksilver (UK) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
The central character in this book is a drink dependant, divorced cop, who has problems with authority. So far so hackneyed; but Meyer Landsman's beat is in Sitka, Alaska; a Jewish homeland set up in 1948. Israel as we know it does not exist. Interested? Well you should be. Firstly, this is an excellent piece of detective fiction; the plot is intricate and the characters are well rounded and believable. In addition to an excellent story, the action takes in a beautifully realised alternate reality. Landsman's Alaskan homeland feels as though it exists somewhere more solid than in the Michael Chabon's imagination. This is counter-factual story telling at its best. Chabon's writing style is heavy with metaphor, which I take as a positive but I imagine for some may become wearisome. I did find the novel a little difficult to feel my way into. The author often uses twenty words to describe something when fewer would have sufficed. The novel also contains many Jewish terms. Since I'm not Jewish, I found this broke up the narrative flow as I had to decipher what was meant by a particular word or phrase. As I become used to the style, I found that, like reading the subtitles to a good foreign film, it soon ceased to matter. Perhaps the book's most remarkable feature is that despite being set in an entirely fictitious world, it deals sensitively with issues facing the Jewish diaspora in this world and the divisions within the holy land. Chabon really seems to have a handle on the strengths and frailties of the Jewish psyche. All of this makes the Yiddish Policemen's Union a memorable piece of crime fiction and a truly exceptional novel.
A bit bizarre now and then March 9, 2008 Thomas Koetzsch (Hong Kong) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
For sixty years, Jewish refugees and their descendants have prospered in the Federal district of Sitka, a temporary save haven (or is it heaven?) created in the wake of the Holocaust and the collapse of Israel in 1948. The Jews of the Sitka District have created their own little world in the Alaskan Panhandle, a vibrant and complex frontier city which moves to the music of Yiddish. Now the music is up; the 60 years are over and the territory is to revert back to Alaska. The history of all this is explained in the first 30 pages of the book. Homicide Detective Meyer Landsman (the book's hero) having plenty of problems of his own - broken-up marriage, drinking too much, what to do after reversion, to name but a few - one day discovers that one of the chaps staying at his rundown hotel has been murdered. On investigating this murder - an investigation which has been forbidden by his boss, who is also his ex-wife - Meyer and his partner discover that the chap may have been a run-down junky but once was a Messiah-in-waiting, who is related to a rather notorious family and/or crime syndicate, who want to use him as a Messiah figure-head to re-establish Israel. They eventually try without the Messiah, but the outcome of this is not recounted in this book. That's the story in a nutshell Chess plays a large role in this book, but you don't need to be able to play the game to follow the book. The plot does appear to be rather complicated at times, but so what? Any averagely sane person should be able to follow it. On the downside, I didn't like the frequent use of four-letter words and that is why I only rate it 4 stars. But apart from that it is a good story even though it did strike me a bit bizarre now and then.
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