John J. Clayton is back and more luminous than ever, deeper, too, and funnier. Clayton's people are as real as my friends and family, and give me as much to worry about and even love. Reader take heart! Your cries have been heard! Mitzvah Man is here! —Bill Roorbach Mitzvah Man may be touched with divine fire, crazed with grief, or just plain nuts. He may or may not have prophetic and healing powers. But he certainly has human talents for kind acts and philosophical speculation; he is a likeable and believable hero. His adventures, rising in intensity, keep us wondering what will befall him next, and what he’ll do about it. —Edith Pearlman, author of Binocular Vision Pow! . . . Zowee! . . . Whoosh! Mitzvah Man is the new-look superhero for the modern age. . . . Mitzvah Man will restore your faith in the miracle of simple goodness, and remind us all that the impulse to rescue can both save a life and transcend the agony of loss--even without having to leap tall buildings in a single bound. --Thane Rosenbaum, author of The Golems of Gotham and Second Hand Smoke John J. Clayton, author of Wrestling with Angels: New and Collected Stories, Bodies of the Rich, Kuperman’s Fire, The Man I Never Wanted To Be, and What Are Friends For?, has taught modern literature and fiction writing at the University of Massachusetts since 1969. His stories have appeared in O. Henry Prize Stories, Best American Short Stories, and the Pushcart Prize anthology. His collection Radiance won the Ohio State University Award in Short Fiction and was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award.
Fiction / Jewish interestModern Jewish Literature and Culture268 pages | 6 x 9 | ebook Modern Jewish Literature and Culture Published 2 2012
978-0-89672-756-4
Adam Friedman wears no cape and has no superpowers.Or has he?
Mitzvah Man (ebook)
John J. Clayton
Mourning the death of his wife after a senseless and tragic accident, Boston businessman Adam Friedman finds solace through living the mitzvoth—instructions for goodness, justice, and compassion. In a frenzy of good deeds, he saves lives and helps the needy. Even his adolescent daughter, whose grief is as intense as his own, begins to wonder if there isn’t more than a shared joke to the superhero T-shirt she has designed for him.
When a thwarted crime and a supplicant’s good fortune propel Friedman into the headlines, followers gather unbidden on his doorstep. Voices, dreams, and auras visit him. Miracles occur among family, friends, and strangers alike. But while some hail the Mitzvah Man as a modern-day prophet, others brand him a madman in danger of losing custody of his only child.
Is he crazy? Is he holy? Through his experiences of love and loss, beauty and pain, language and custom, Friedman’s daily quest reveals the unexpected ways in which God may inhabit us all.
A fascinating, extremely well-crafted, important work . . . about middle-class, assimilated Jewish American life, and its real need for connections to a faith that has come to seem almost irrelevant. —Sanford Sternlicht, author of The Tenement Saga: The Lower East Side and Early Jewish American Writers
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