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Paperback Chicken Dreaming Corn Book

ISBN: 0820328162

ISBN13: 9780820328164

Chicken Dreaming Corn

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In 1916, on the immigrant blocks of the Southern port city of Mobile, Alabama, a Romanian Jewish shopkeeper, Morris Kleinman, is sweeping his walk in preparation for the Confederate veterans parade... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Heartwarming, but not simple tale

Chicken Dreaming Corn is a heartwarming but not simple tale of first generation immigrants. The backstory we receive through flashbacks that provide ever deeper understanding of the current struggles. Morris is the center of the family and the story: everything is viewed through the prism of his understanding. The children end up predictably rejecting their heritage, but in time, they take their places in their family's future. A great read, I finished it in two days & will look for more by Roy Hoffman

The greatest generation

Chicken Dreaming Corn gave me, an American with Romanian ancestory who now resides in the south, insight into the roots of our family values and the guiding themes of that particular generation of immigrants' lives. The compelling story is carried mainly by the immediate love the reader feels toward the main and certainly most realized of Hoffman's characters, Morris Kleinman. The story is crafted in such a way that Hoffman leads the reader seamlessly through the important events in Morris' life in such a way that flashbacks and backstory never seem contrived. The reader is privy to the building of Morris' character as well as his lapses into weakness. He is both inspirational and steadfast, an everyday hero because he lives strongly by the themes of his generation: family, hardwork, pride, humanity, and strength. These are personified in the Morris' actions against the monumental difficulties in his life, difficulties that he never lets stand in his way. The story could have been deepened for me if Hoffman had given a bit more attention to the personality of Morris's fellow store owner and life long friends as well as the other people in his family and town. Though he touches on a few of these characters, I feel that he let a many of them drop and did not satify me with the depth of relationship that Hoffman implied. Many of the subplots moved too quickly for me and could have been strengthened without remotely risking a rambling story. Hoffman's writing is vivid and concise, but a bit too concise, sometimes leaving me just wanting to get back to Morris because I could not sink my teeth into the other characters. Despite this, Chicken Dreaming Corn is a worthy read and has definitely taken a unique bend on two thoroughly written about experiences: that of the American south and that of the greatest, absolutely greatest, generation.

A hidden gem of a book

Morris Kleinman has travelled from his native Romania to New York and now to the port city of Mobile, Alabama, to raise his family and start his fortune. The journey from the Old World wasn't easy for father Morris but he has brought with him the virtues of hard work and a mighty faith in God. These mores, along with the many opportunities in a young country, may just give this Jewish shop owner a chance at a better life. While the Kleinman family fares better than they would in their homeland, where Jews are under the iron shackles of Anti-Semitism, their lives are still dominated by cultural prejudice, financial hardship and tragedy. The story starts in 1916 and takes the reader through nearly 30 years of family history; through two world wars and the Great Depression. The sacrifices required to live through tough times are a major theme in the book. One has to be taken by how recent arrivees to America have such a love of country even as their own lives are so trying. Another interesting aspect of the book is the friendships that Morris forges with blacks and immigrants like Cubans in his downtown neighborhood. There is a strong sense of community among these people, who have little more in common than the place they have chosen to make a new life. Highly recommended.

The Deep South as a Multicultural Experience

I just finished reading "Chicken Dreaming Corn" by Roy Hoffman and found it a most satisfying read. As a lifelong resident of the Mobile, Alabama area myself, I have often thought that the multicultural origins of the great port cities of the Southern United States are not well understood by our neighbors in other parts of the country. As I have travelled, I have often had comments on my lack of stereotypical southern accent and have found myself explaining that Mobile is a city with origins and cultural influence from around the world. It continues to be so today. Certainly, as portrayed in this book, we have a microcosm of the American experience. Also, this book tells once again the poignant story of the human experience...the hopes and dreams of a man for his life and for his children's lives weighed down as always by those things which we simply can't change. If you would like to walk in the shoes of a Southern Jewish American dress salesman who lives over his store on a street in a Southern port city with his children and wife in the first half of the twentieth century and whose smoking companions include a Cuban cigar maker, a German furniture salesman,and a Greek baker, then you will enjoy escaping back in time with Roy Hoffman for a few hours. Thanks Mr. Hoffman.
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