The Yiddish Policemen's Union

by Michael Chabon
The Yiddish Policemen's Union
book data
7114 ratings, 3.66 average rating, 1930 reviews (more data...)
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published
June 4th 2007 by Fourth Estate

binding
Hardcover, 432 pages

isbn
0007150393   (isbn13: 9780007150397)

description
For sixty years, Jewish refugees and their descendants have prospered in the Federal District of Sitka, a "temporary" safe haven created in ...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 5505)



Jesse
bookshelves: alt--history
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for: Fans of Chabon and really big fans of Alt-History
I just finished this book a few days ago and am a bit let down by it. It starts out very slow, but eventually it picks up and gets interesting. A good 70% of this book is a solid and quirky murder/conspiracy mystery set in an alternate world where Israel failed soon after its initial formation. Unfortunately the book starts out slow and really doesn't give you much to care about until further along. Then after the excellent middle, the story just kind of fizzles out. It almost feels like th...more
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Random
Read in May, 2008
¿En qué situación se encontrarían miles de judíos desplazados por las autoridades internacionales a un lugar como Alaska? El sindicato de policías yiddish imagina una historia alternativa en la que, durante más de sesenta años, los judíos refugiados y sus descendientes han vivido tranquilamente en el distrito federal de Sitka, un espacio temporal dependiente de Estados Unidos en el que los judíos han residido en paz. Sin embargo, el sueño de “un hogar para los judíos” parece lleg...more
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Pancha
bookshelves: fiction
Read in March, 2008
The problem I face with this book is while I enjoy reading while I'm reading it, once I put it down I don't feel any great urgency to pick it up again.

And now that I've finished it, the ending was incredibly unsatisfying.
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Lmj
Lmj marked it as to-read (review of isbn 0007149824)
05/26/08

bookshelves: own, to-read
recommended to Lmj by: SNS 12-30-07 Vick Mickunas "The Best Fiction of 2007"
clever novel merges detective mystery thriller with alternate history.
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Geoff
As a detective novel it's a fun read, and Chabon's definitely got talent, but I did find myself drifting a bit towards the end. I went to a talk where he read from this book, and I liked the segment he read aloud, and he talked about how he spent three years working on the thing and it sounded very arduous and made it very difficult for me to not like, just because I knew what went into it. I'm wondering how much I would have liked it if I'd never heard him talk about it.

I spent a good dea...more
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Jesse
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for: Noir Genre Fans, Modern Jewish Literature Aficianados
I agree with one reviewer (whose name and publication I cannot recall at the moment) who said that "only Michael Chabon could have written this book." There are moments of humor in this dark sketch of the Alaskan Jewish diaspora that leave the reader nodding his head and thinking that only a people who have the Jews' particular history can say such things and get away with it. I, for one, think that this book is brilliant, gritty, hilarious, and ultimately tragic in its dealings with t...more
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Edan
Edan is currently reading it (review of isbn 0007149832)
11/28/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
I'm reading this for the book club I facilitate. I wouldn't otherwise pick this up, because I wasn't a fan of Kavalier and Clay. Still, I'm keeping an open mind.
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Cathy
Set in Sitka, Alaska, a homeland established for Jews following the holocaust, the murder of a chess prodigy junkie propels Detective Landsman and his half Jewish, half-Tlinglit partner,Berko into the world of the ultra Orthodox. It's been 60 years since Sitka was given to the Jews who survived the camps as a safe haven and in one month it will revert to American ownership. The Jews will now have to fend for their own. [return:] Meyer Landsman, a depressed. alcoholic detective, goes up again...more
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R.
05/01/08

bookshelves: unfinishedreads
Winner of the Nebula Award for Best Science Fiction Novel of 2007 - also up for the Hugo and the Edgar; and a film adaptation by the Coen Bros.

i.e. This must be the greatest novel ever written.

So, I'll get the trade paperback and give it a third attempt...

***

Okay, just a little book fetishism here - the trade paperback: I had hoped that the cover would be glossy, waterproof. Instead, it's that faux-cloth feeling stuff that easily rips, tears. Interesting art on...more
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Craig
Craig marked it as to-read (review of isbn 0007149824)
12/03/08

bookshelves: to-read
Warren Ellis said I'm an idiot if i don't read this so... i guess i better get around to it sometime?
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Lisa
05/31/08

Read in May, 2008
Several years ago, I visited a grocery store in Alaska. A 5-lb box of matzah was selling for $25. This prompted me to ponder what it would be like to be a Jew in Alaska. Well, obviously the same thought crossed Michael Chabon's mind, but with much different consequences. What a wonderful tale. Typical Chabon, always keeping you on your toes, with a storyline that was so far away from my own daily life, but very entertaining. As with all Chabon's books, one must read with a dictionary at your sid...more
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Stephanie
Stephanie is currently reading it (review of isbn 0007149824)
12/02/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
Still trying to finish. Got bored with it.
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Deborah
Deborah is currently reading it (review of isbn 0007149824)
11/28/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
love the noir-y voice...
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Joel
11/02/08

Read in November, 2008
This is a very interesting and funny book. It is written by the Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Chabon, who had become famous for his witty language. This book is about a made up city where everything that can go wrong does. When reading this book sometimes I actually began to laugh out loud.
I suggest this book to everyone who doesn't know what to read next because it surely won't let you down. It is entertaining to everyone students and teachers, and it is written very well, and flows very well...more
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Yak
05/16/08

A great novel, and that's coming from someone who doesn't like mysteries because I can never follow the damn plots or figure it out even after all is revealed at the end. I liked it because of its imaginative setting in a mythical Alaskan territory set aside for Jews by the U.S. after the attempt for create th state of Israel failed in 1948. It's drenched in Jewish culture and religion side-by-side with hard-boiled detective novel trappings. I wonder how non-Jewish readers liked it.
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TheTyee.ca
bookshelves: reviews
Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union is the most entertaining, and most literate, novel that I've read in a long time. It's worth reading just for its complex characters and fast-paced plot. But there is also real satisfaction to be found from tracing the hybrid ancestry of the genre that Chabon has created.

On one level, The Yiddish Policemen's Union is a murder mystery, with a stubborn but...

read more ...
http://thetyee.ca/Books/2007/0...
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M.darcy
Read in July, 2008
I enjoyed this book immensely. It is a well-developed mystery written by a craftsman - complete with dimensional characters in a believable, complicated world. Yiddish Policemen's Union is also funny and playful and the use of Yiddish in the book is fantastic - this includes the imaginative, fictional slang of Sitka. Favorite word: Schlosser - a hit man. It actually means "mechanic" - that and they call their cell phones Shoyfers. Good stuff.
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Laila
bookshelves: half-read
Oh, I am so sad to say that after two weeks, I couldn't get through more than 100 pages of this. It's a shame really because I think if I had more time, I could get into it. I'll have to wait until it's not a 7-day book at the library anymore. If I had not read "amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay," I wouldn't give it a second thought. Yet I loved that book so much I am determined to find something worthwhile in Chabon's newest book.
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dan
05/23/07

The writing is fantastic, lots of beautiful and surprising similies and metaphors, engaging characters, that kind of thing. I know the original version he gave to his editor is not the version that was published--he had to do a bigtime rewrite--and the book feels like maybe it's the first or second draft of a really amazing novel. I still recommend it, though, as I would with any Chabon book.
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Karen
Karen marked it as to-read (review of isbn 0007149824)
07/31/08

bookshelves: to-read
This book is right up my alley: I love, love Chabon and I'm completely fanatic about mysteries. But I've owned this for a while now, started it at least 3 times and cannot get into it. I'm putting it on my list because eventually I WILL read it. Just like Underworld, The Corrections, Cloud Atlas, and all the other books I'm pretty sure I will like but have started and then set aside.
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The Yiddish Policemen's Union (Hardcover)
The Yiddish Policemen's Union (Paperback)
The Yiddish Policemen's Union (Paperback)
The Yiddish Policemen's Union CD: A Novel (Audio CD)
The Yiddish Policemen's Union, limited edition (Hardcover)







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