The Healer

Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 13
9780802112231 
Category
 
Publication Year
1990 
Publisher
Subject
Literature & Fiction; History & Criticism; Regional & Cultural 
Description
The eighth of Aharon Appelfeld's brilliantly original novels to be published in English, The Healer is a remarkable story about faith and faithlessness among European Jews on the eve of World War II. Felix Katz is a Viennese businessman whose life is choked by suppressed rage and intolerance for those who have faith. When conventional methods fail to cure his daughter's emotional illness, Felix in desperation agrees to travel with his family to the Carpathian Mountains in search of a famous healer. Months later, after being snowbound in a rural Jewish village that sustains itself on faith, Felix returns to a Vienna plagued by the disease of anti-Semitism. The Healer wonderfully combines elements of fable with the complex sensibility of a great modernist writer sensitive to the overbearing moral issues of our time. --This text refers to the Paperback edition. Editorial Reviews From Publishers Weekly Narrated with the ever-expanding significance of a parable and the disarming simplicity of a folk tale, this novel of family life in pre-WW II Vienna by the accomplished Israeli author ( For Every Sin ) explores the complex web of emotions binding Felix, a testy but thriving factory owner; his wife, Henrietta, from whom he feels estranged; and their children. Karl, physically adept, is failing in school; his father denies him the military academy training he desires. Helga, a gifted pianist, develops neurotic symptoms that no doctor--not even "one of Professor Jung's assistants"--can cure. Though no longer practicing Jews, the four make a pilgrimage, for Helga's sake, to a remote Jewish hamlet in the Carpathian Mountains, near Henrietta's ancestral home, to consult an old man reputed to be a healer. There they pass six snowed-in months at a lavish inn. Felix eats and idles, scornful of what he views as quackery. He picks fights and reflects on his empty life while his wife and daughter heed the sage's counsel to pray and study the "bright, holy letters" of Scripture. Felix's efforts to leave the mountain for his beloved city, where anti-Semitism is already rife, bestow a tragic irony on the close of this resonant work. Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal The eighth of Appelfeld's novels to be translated into English, this work concerns the futility of denying who we are. Felix Katz is an "assimilated Jew," so when his daughter becomes ill and conventional treatment fails, he only reluctantly agrees to journey with his family from Vienna to the Carpathian Mountains to seek out a holy man, renowned as a healer. The healer's prescription? A prayerbook and the admonition that "the girl must be taught these bright holy letters." While his wife and daughter begin a journey back to their Jewish roots, Felix and his son remain aloof, finally returning to Vienna. Yet for all Felix's attempts to deny his "Jewishness," a policeman on the train home notes that his Jewish name is "annoying." It is a hint of what awaits--a Holocaust that cares little about faithfulness or faithlessness, only names. As is typical of Appelfeld's work, much is left unstated. Essential for most libraries. - David W. Henderson, Eckerd Coll. Lib., St. Petersburg, Fla. Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. 
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