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Review "[Crackpot] seems to me to be a profoundly religious work, in the very broadest sense, ultimately a celebration of life and of the mystery that is at the heart of life. . . . Seldom does one find in a novel a character who is so alive and who is portrayed with such change and development as Hoda. . . . As one of the greatest characters in our literature, she helps us more fully to occupy our own past and to inhabit our lives."—Margaret Laurence, author of The Diviners (Margaret Laurence) Read more From the Back Cover Hoda is a prostitute, but that is not the most important fact about her. Earthy, bawdy, vulnerable, and big-hearted, she is the daughter of an impoverished Jewish couple who emigrated from Russia to Canada to escape persecution. Growing up in a ghetto of Winnipeg, she experiences cruelty and bigotry early and fights back with humor and anger, which is something to behold as her young body takes on gargantuan proportions. In the neighborhood, she is considered a crackpot and worse. In truth, she is a cracked pot, a flawed human being, but her quest for love, which brings hope out of humiliation, is one of the most memorable in modern fiction. Crackpot, set in the period between two world wars, is Adele Wiseman's comic vision, for all its darkness. Somewhat satirically, the novel touches on puritanical hypocrisy and the inhumanity of institutions, notably the schools and the welfare system. Hoda, caught in a web of relationships beginning with her blind father and humpbacked mother, is its great heartbeat. Read more See all Editorial Reviews
R**R
Okay
I really didn't like this story. I grew bored with the story
L**.
Touched me deeply
This book touched me so deeply that I keep it on a shelf of my most important books. It skillfully brought me to understand and accept an untraditional journey, that of a young girl who doesn't fit in, who enjoys sex generously with local boys, and who accepts payment for it eventually, with dignity and integrity, because her family needs the money.
R**H
sensual and spiritual
This book is a hidden treasure, deserves attention and appreciation. Brings to mind the best of I.B. Singer; rich with humor, tragedy, sexuality and spirituality.
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