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Justice, My Brother, My Sister

Justice, My Brother, My Sister

Life and Death in A Mexican Family

by: Roberta Kalechofsky

Passions shape destiny, geography molds personality, and fate rules the landscape in this passionate, engaging family saga.

A novel of revenge set in Mexico about family passions of hatred, jealousy and fear, which set in motion the migration of the Donajero family from rural life to an industrial city and the disintegration of their traditional patterns of peasant life.

As the wife of a brutal husband, Felicita Donajero is unforgettable in her wily use of insanity to protect herself.

As the wronged brother, Ricardo presents a haunting search for a spiritual life which will free him from hating his brother.

Passions shape destiny; geography molds personality, and fate rules the landscape.

 "Kalechofsky uses a stripped-down prose style that is well suited to the scrubby landscape and grim events, and that is sparse enough to balance out a melodramatic ending."

Publishers' Weekly

 

About Author: 

Roberta Kalechofsky is the author of seven works of fiction, a monograph on George Orwell, poetry, and two collections of essays. She has been published in quarterlies, reviews and anthologies and was the recipient of Literary Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Council on the Arts.

Several of her stories, and two novellas, La Hoya and Stephen's Passion, have been translated into Italian and published in Italy. La Hoya received excellent reviews in major publications, such as Corriere Della Sera, and was included in a college curriculum in Italy under the title, Veduta di Toledo. Stephen's Passion has also been included in a college curriculum in courses in American Fiction in the University of Florence, under the title, La Passione Di Stephen. Her novel Bodmin, 1349: An Epic Novel of Christians and Jews in the Plague Years was included twice in a college curriculum in the United States.

She began Micah Publications in 1975 and has received publishing grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Council on the Arts, in addition to her literary fellowships. As a publisher, she created The Echad Series, which includes five anthologies of Jewish writing from around the world, and has published 40 different titles in poetry, fiction, scholarship, vegetarianis, and animal rights. She is active in the animal rights and vegetarian movements; she launched the organization Jews for Animal Rights in 1985 and coordinates publishing projects with this organization.

She has also been a contributing editor to various magazines, such as Margins, and On The Issues and taught at Brooklyn College for four years.

She was a participant in a round-table discussion, "Please Use Other Door: Literary Creativity and the Publishing Industry," with Cynthia Ozick, Hugh Nissenson, Gordon Lish, Elizabeth Sifton, and Robert Boyers, which was published in RSA Journal, #3 (March, 1992).

She graduated from Brooklyn College and received a doctorate in English literature in 1970 from New York University.

A critical essay on her work can be found in the Dictionary of Literary Biographies, Volume 28: Jewish Fiction Writers. A list of her published work and/or extended resume is available upon request.

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Justice, My Brother, My Sister

a novel of family passions in a time of social change

Read this fascinating book free at Libertary.com

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