Henry Roth (born Feb. 8, 1906, Tysmenica, Galicia, Austria-Hungary [now in Ukraine]—died Oct. 13, 1995, Albuquerque, N.M., U.S.) was an American teacher, farmer, machinist, and sporadic author whose novel Call It Sleep (1934) was one of the neglected masterpieces of American literature in the 1930s.
The son of Jewish immigrants, Roth graduated from the College of the City of New York in 1928 and held a variety of jobs thereafter. His novel Call It Sleep appeared in 1934 to laudatory reviews and sold 4,000 copies before it went out of print and was apparently forgotten. But in the late 1950s and ’60s, Alfred Kazin, Irving Howe, and other American literary figures were able to revive public interest in the book, which came to be recognized as a classic of Jewish-American literature and as an important proletarian novel of the 1930s. Roth himself published virtually nothing for 30 years after the book’s appearance and contented himself with tutoring, raising waterfowl on a farm, and rearing a family. He began writing again in the late 1960s, and his second book, Shifting Landscape: A Composite, 1925–87, a collection of short stories and essays, appeared in 1987. His novel Mercy of a Rude Stream: A Star Shines Over Mt. Morris Park (1994) was the first of a projected six-volume work that returned to the themes of Call It Sleep. A second volume, A Diving Rock on the Hudson, was published in 1995.
Call It Sleep centres on the character and perceptions of a young boy who is the son of Yiddish-speaking Jewish immigrants living in a ghetto in New York City. Roth uses stream-of-consciousness techniques to show the boy’s psychological development and to relay his perceptions of his family and of the larger world around him. The book powerfully evokes the terrors and anxieties the child experiences in his anguished relations with his father, and the squalid urban environment in which the family lives is realistically described.