Bernard Malamud
- Awards And Honors:
- National Book Award
- Pulitzer Prize
Bernard Malamud (born April 26, 1914, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died March 18, 1986, New York, New York) was an American novelist and short-story writer who made parables out of Jewish immigrant life.
Malamud’s parents were Russian Jews who had fled tsarist Russia. He was born in Brooklyn, where his father owned a small grocery store. The family was poor. Malamud’s mother died when he was 15 years old, and he was unhappy when his father remarried. He early on assumed responsibility for his handicapped brother. Malamud was educated at the City College of New York (B.A., 1936) and Columbia University (M.A., 1942). He taught at high schools in New York City (1940–49), at Oregon State University (1949–61), and at Bennington College in Vermont (1961–66, 1968–86).
His first novel, The Natural (1952; film 1984), is a fable about a baseball hero who is gifted with miraculous powers. The Assistant (1957; film 1997) is about a young Gentile hoodlum and an old Jewish grocer. The Fixer (1966), which takes place in tsarist Russia, is the story of a Jewish handyman unjustly imprisoned for the murder of a Christian boy; it won Malamud a Pulitzer Prize. His other novels are A New Life (1961), The Tenants (1971; film 2005), Dubin’s Lives (1979), and God’s Grace (1982).
Malamud’s genius is most apparent in his short stories. Though told in a spare, compressed prose that reflects the terse speech of their immigrant characters, the stories often burst into emotional metaphorical language. Grim city neighbourhoods are visited by magical events, and their hardworking residents are given glimpses of love and self-sacrifice. Malamud’s short-story collections are The Magic Barrel (1958), Idiots First (1963), Pictures of Fidelman (1969), and Rembrandt’s Hat (1973). The Stories of Bernard Malamud appeared in 1983, and The People, and Uncollected Stories was published posthumously in 1989. The People, an unfinished novel, tells the story of a Jewish immigrant adopted by a 19th-century American Indian tribe. One critic spoke of “its moral sinew and its delicacy of tone.”