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Saturday, May 14, 2016

Finished: The Fixer (Malamud) Pulitzer Prize winning novel about, Yakov Bok, a Jewish man in 1911 Russia who is falsely accused of killing a young Christian boy, and imprisoned in detestable conditions before finally being brought to trial! The book ends as Yakov is finally being carried by carriage to his trial, so book readers never know his fate (though it is assumed that he will be found guilty, even though there is no evidence against him). In fact, The Fixer is based on the infamous real life story, imprisonment, trial and release of Russian Jewish man, Menahem Beilis. In real life, enough people, both Jewish and non-Jewish, apparently cried out for justice when it was obvious that Beilis had been falsely accused of a "blood ritual" killing of a young boy. In the book, very few people cry out, and some who do are actually imprisoned themselves, but there is a lawyer who believes in Yakov Bok, so we are led to believe there might be hope for the right verdict, but most likely not. Throughout his horrific prison trials, the prosecutor tries to get Yakov to confess many times, telling him it will go easier on him. In reality, the prosecutor actually suspects the child's mother of being involved in the murder, but since he's got a Jew in prison and Tsarist Russia was getting uncomfortable with giving Jewish people their rights, the prosecutor intends to make an example of Yakov Bok. Meanwhile, Yakov deeply examines both is life and the bigger world that he has been living in. The book is really a wider statement on how people who are feared are terribly mistreated. I guess it was a good Pulitzer choice, but again, it was one of those very depressing books that makes you question where the goodness in the world is or was.

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