A Wedding in Brownsville By Isaac Bashevis Singer

A Wedding in Brownsville By Isaac Bashevis Singer Isaac Bashevis Singer (1903-1991) was a Polish-American writer and Nobel Prize-winning author known for his Yiddish-language stories that explore Jewish life, folklore, and themes of spirituality, identity, and morality. His works often delve into the complexities of human nature, blending realism with mysticism. In his story, “A Wedding in Brownsville,” Singer tells the tale of a man named Dr. Margolin, who returns to Brooklyn’s Brownsville neighborhood for a wedding after many years. As he reconnects with familiar faces, he is haunted by memories of his past, including lost love and the horrors of the Holocaust. The story explores themes of memory, guilt, and the enduring impact of trauma on personal identity and relationships. Q: Who were the Senciminers? Ans. Sencimineers were Jewish villagers from the town of Sencimin, where Dr. Margolin once lived. They are now dispersed due to the devastation of WW II, and some of them attend th...

On destroying Books by J.C. Squire (Study Questions)

 

On Destroying Books

By J.C Squire

 

What sort of books were presented to the soldiers by the British public?

 

The soldiers were presented by the British public with very old magazines, guide books, old numbers of Whitaker Almanac and all such unwanted or trivial books which were no longer useful to them. Some of these books might get into the parcel by accident but there are more chances that people took it as an opportunity to get rid of unwanted books.

 

Was it the interest of the soldiers that prompted their action, or was it the wish to get rid of useless books?

 

In some cases, there might be a genuine effort on the part of the people to send soldiers something worth reading but most often this is not the reason. In most cases, people take this as an opportunity to get rid of the junk they have collected in the name of books.

 

 

Why should bad books be destroyed?

 

According to the author it is absurd to keep rubbish merely because it is printed. He says that bad books should be destroyed because it will not only make room for the new books but also save the heirs the trouble of sorting out the rubbish or storing it.


 Why could not the author burn the unwanted books?

 

The author could not burn the unwanted books because he had no kitchen range. He had a gas cooker but it was not possible to toast the books on it. It was also not possible for him to burn them in his study fire because he would have to do it leaf by leaf which was certainly a time-consuming process as he had a heap of unwanted books.

 

How did he decide to get rid of them?

 

He finally decided to do to the books what so many people do to the kittens. He decided to put all the unwanted books in a sack and through them in the river.

 

Describe the author’s midnight venture to throw the books in the river and the suspicions his actions were likely to arouse?

 

It was midnight and the air was icy cold when the author put the sack of books on his shoulder and started his journey towards the river. He met a policeman on the way who he thought looked suspicious of him. The author thought that the sack of books could be perceived as swag. When he finally reached the embankment and was about to throw the sack in the river, the full implications of his actions dawned upon him. If anyone happened to see him throw the sack in the river, it would appear to him that he is getting rid of the corpse after murdering it. No one especially the police would believe him that he threw a sack full of unwanted books in the river.

 

How did he muster up courage at last to fling them into the river?

 

He told himself that if his friends came to know about his current condition, they would certainly think of him as a coward. He had reached a point of desperation. He told himself that what if they took him as a murderer and hanged him for it, better men than himself have gone to the gallows. So, with a courage of despair, he finally threw the sack in the river and got rid of unwanted books.

 

Did he come to have a feeling for those books once he had got rid of them?

 

Once he got rid of the books and was walking home, he became sad at their poor fate. The thought that those books would remain lying there forlorn and forgotten made him think that perhaps the fate of those books was worse than they deserved.

 

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

It's Country for me by Patricia Demuth

First Year at Harrow by Winston Churchill (Objective type and Study Questions)

The Last Leaf by O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) Mcqs