
The Ruined House
A Novel
Author: Ruby Namdar
Narrator: Paul Boehmer
Unabridged: 21 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Harper
Published: 11/07/2017
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Fantasy, Psychological

Author: Ruby Namdar
Narrator: Paul Boehmer
Unabridged: 21 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Harper
Published: 11/07/2017
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Fantasy, Psychological
Ruby Namdar was born and raised in Jerusalem to a family of Iranian-Jewish heritage. His first book, Haviv (2000), won the Israeli Ministry of Culture’s Award for Best First Publication. The Ruined House won the 2014 Sapir Prize—Israel’s most important literary award. He currently lives in New York City with his wife and two daughters, and teaches Jewish literature, focusing on biblical and Talmudic narrative.
Middle-aged academic Andrew Cohen has it all; his girlfriend is half his age, his academic reputations is great, he has flawless style. He and his ex get along; he has a good relationship with his daughters; his students love him; his girlfriend asks nothing of him. He’s got everything designed and......more
The Ruined House is the type of book that may leave some readers wondering if they should write a review or not. While for many the novel will obviously be seen as a Jewish literary masterpiece, for others it will simply be seen as a 500-page story of a Jewish college professor in New York having a......more
Ruined House is an excellent debut that balances internal struggles, religion, and isolation within contemporary life with lush language and delightful dialogue. What I loved most about the novel is the intersection of religion and modern-day identity crisis. The novel is divided into seven sections......more
Engrossing, feverish and uncomfortable, Namdar draws us into perfect Andrew's middle aged, fragile psyche with deft skill and a thrumming sort of prose that has an incredible elegance even in it's most painful and explosive moments.......more
Four and one-half stars. I was loving this book until the last few dozen pages. I felt Namdar missed an opportunity with Cohen's identity with the Second Temple Kohen, the smoke enveloping the City on the 8th of Av, etc. I felt the dénouement gave Cohen a pass, to sink back into his spiritually empt......more