· Bernard Malamud's short story "The Magic Barrel" from his short story collection of the same name about a busy rabbinical student, Leo Finkle, who enlists a matchmaker, Pinye Salzman, as he becomes convinced that a rabbi should be married. /5. · 'The Magic Barrel' is a short story written by Bernard Malamud that tells the story of a man's internal struggles as he searches for a woman to date. · In Bernard Malamud’s short story, “The Magic Barrel”, a rabbinical student, Leo Finkle, is in search of a suitable wife to help him get a congregation before he becomes a rabbi. As he has been completely absorbed in his studies for six years, which has led to his ignorance in his social life, he decides to turn to a professional matchmaker – Pinye Salzman for help.
The Magic Barrel, written by Bernard Malamud in , follows the story of Leo Finkle, a reclusive rabbinical student, as he enlists the help of matchmaker Pinye Salzman in finding an appropriate. The story of Leo finkle how he finds a partner. The Magic Barrel is a collection of thirteen short stories written by Bernard Malamud and published by Farrar, Straus bltadwin.ru, the Jewish Publication Society released its own edition at the same time. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction. It was also Malamud's debut collection of stories.. Overview. Many of the individual stories collected in The Magic Barrel depict.
In Bernard Malamud’s short story, “The Magic Barrel”, a rabbinical student, Leo Finkle, is in search of a suitable wife to help him get a congregation before he becomes a rabbi. As he has been completely absorbed in his studies for six years, which has led to his ignorance in his social life, he decides to turn to a professional matchmaker – Pinye Salzman for help. Analysis of Bernard Malamud’s The Magic Barrel By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on Bernard Malamud has been reckoned a magician himself in that, as one of the most significant Jewish American writers of the 20th century, he helped acquaint readers with Jewish culture as he simultaneously placed Jewish fiction in the mainstream of American literature. THE MAGIC BARREL by Bernard Malamud, In form, content, and, perhaps most of all, moral vision, critics have long regarded "The Magic Barrel" as quintessential Bernard Malamud. In the story Leo Finkle, an unmarried rabbinical student more familiar with books than with life, has been advised that he will find it easier to land a pulpit if he is married.
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