Críticas:
"Anyone who finds The Chosen is finding a jewel. Its themes are profound and universal.... It will stay on our bookshelves and be read again."--The Wall Street Journal
"The Chosen is one of the best novels I have read in the last decade. The author asks and provides unique and original answers to the nature of parental love, infuses his novel with a quiet and compelling wisdom, and brings alive a period and neighborhood with rare style."--Los Angeles Times
"Perceptive, touching, exquisite, and unusual.... This is a most profound novel: Chaim Potok is a gifted writer."--The Boston Sunday Herald
"It makes you want to buttonhole strangers in the street to be sure they know it's around.... It revives my sometimes fading belief in humanity. Works of this caliber should be occasion for singing in the streets and shouting from the rooftops."--Chicago Tribune
"So entertaining, so full of love and compassion that readers of all persuasions will take it to their hearts. Mr. Potok is writing about two fathers and their sons... in a way that will ring just as true at Iowa as in Brooklyn."--Publishers Weekly
"The Chosen is a compelling, absorbing book. It offers deep, sympathetic insight into the variety and profundity of Jewish tradition and heritage. It's interesting as social commentary and as, simply, story. It's a joy to read for its splendid, singing prose style as much as for its message."--Minneapolis Star Tribune
"We rejoice, and even weep a little.... Long afterward it remains in the mind and delights."--The New York Times Book Review
"It is a simple, almost meager story... yet the warmth and pathos of the dealings between fathers and sons and the understated odyssey from boyhood to manhood give the book a range that makes it worth anybody's reading."--The Christian Science Monitor
"A fine, moving, gratifying book."--Saturday Review
"Sensitively written and heartwarming."--Library Journal
Reseña del editor:
A coming-of-age classic about two Jewish boys growing up in Brooklyn in the 1940s, this “profound and universal” story of what we share across cultures remains deeply pertinent today (The Wall Street Journal).
It’s the spring of 1944 and fifteen-year-olds Reuven Malter and Danny Saunders have lived five blocks apart all their lives. But they’ve never met, not until the day an accident during a softball game sparks an unlikely friendship. Soon these two boys—one expected to become a Hasidic rebbe, the other at ease with secular America—are drawn into one another’s worlds despite one father’s strong opposition.
Set against the backdrop of WWII and the creation of the state of Israel, The Chosen is a poignant novel about transformation and tradition, growing up and growing wise, and finding yourself—even if that might mean leaving your community.
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