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Sons and Daughters by Chaim Grade, review: ‘a lost world comes to life’

A deeply affecting portrait of a pious family’s trials and turmoil in an eastern Europe on the brink of collapse

May 9, 2025 12:56
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Chaim Grade and the new translation of his novel Sons and Daughters
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Written in New York, and originally published in serialised form between the mid-1960s and the mid-1970s, Chaim Grade’s epic Yiddish-language novel about the life of a rabbinical family in 1930s Poland has never been produced in book form, until now. In part this is due to the barriers erected by Grade’s widow Inna, who denied access to her husband’s work and regularly decried the efforts of his translators. Inna’s death in 2010 changed that. Sons and Daughters, in Rose Waldman’s excellent translation, is one of the fruits of an evolving Grade renaissance.

Two sons of the long-suffering rabbi Sholem Shachne have emigrated to Switzerland and America, another is a destructive meshuggenah; his youngest plans to make aliyah. Reform Judaism, communism, secular Yiddish culture, Nietzsche and, most sinisterly, Polish antisemitism, all contribute to the sense of a world in collapse.

Yet none of the novel’s large cast of characters senses the impending coup de grâce understood by Grade and his readers.

Grade once claimed that he wrote “from the perspective of a current yeshivah boy, not a former one”, even though, having been brought up in a religious Vilna family, he had cast aside religion.