Book details

  • Genre:fiction
  • Sub-genre:Mystery & Detective / Historical
  • Language:English
  • Pages:587
  • eBook ISBN:9798990998063

Adventures of Max Spitzkopf: The Yiddish Sherlock Holmes

By Jonas Kreppel

Overview


A rabbi's granddaughter missing, feared murdered . . . a Jew wrong-fully accused of espionage . . . a shtetl teenager kidnapped and sold into prostitution in Turkey . . . in a far corner of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, crime is rampant and Jews are at their wit's end. Enter super-sleuth Max Spitzkopf, passionate defender of his people. Brave, ingenious, and a master of disguise, Spitzkopf's crime-solving adventures take him from an Alpine fortress to the sewers of Vienna, and into casinos, brothels, dungeons, and monasteries. Giving a unique twist to a beloved literary genre, the fifteen Spitzkopf mysteries enthralled Yiddish readers over a century ago. Reading these page-turning tales, with their linguistic verve and historical charm masterfully rendered in Mikhl Yashinsky's translation, it's easy to see why the young Isaac Bashevis Singer raced to his Warsaw newsstand to catch each new episode.
Read more

Description


A rabbi's granddaughter missing, feared murdered . . . a Jew wrong-fully accused of espionage . . . a shtetl teenager kidnapped and sold into prostitution in Turkey . . . in a far corner of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, crime is rampant and Jews are at their wit's end. Enter super-sleuth Max Spitzkopf, passionate defender of his people. Brave, ingenious, and a master of disguise, Spitzkopf's crime-solving adventures take him from an Alpine fortress to the sewers of Vienna, and into casinos, brothels, dungeons, and monasteries. Giving a unique twist to a beloved literary genre, the fifteen Spitzkopf mysteries enthralled Yiddish readers over a century ago. Reading these page-turning tales, with their linguistic verve and historical charm masterfully rendered in Mikhl Yashinsky's translation, it's easy to see why the young Isaac Bashevis Singer raced to his Warsaw newsstand to catch each new episode.
Read more

About The Author


Jonas (Yoyne) Kreppel was born into a Hasidic family in Drohobych, Galicia, in 1874, the fourth of seven children. After apprenticing as a printer, he found his calling as a journalist, civil servant, and author. Kreppel attended the Czernowitz conference in 1908 that adjudicated on the future of Yiddish, was active in the Orthodox political movement Agudas Yisroel, and edited several Jewish periodicals in Galicia. After marrying the daughter of prominent Krakow printer Josef Fischer, he began anonymously writing for his father-in-law's press the fifteen stories of fictional supersleuth Max Spitzkopf, whose exploits would thrill vast swaths of Yiddish readers, including the young Isaac Bashevis Singer. Settling in Vienna in 1914, Kreppel's chief activity for the next three decades consisted of editing a German-Jewish weekly, penning historical and political tomes in German as well as another series of popular fiction pamphlets in Yiddish, and serving as a press officer for the Austrian diplomatic service. As a prominent Austrian-Jewish intellectual and outspoken critic of Nazism, Kreppel became a target shortly after Austria united with Hitler's Germany in 1938. He was sent first to Dachau and then to Buchenwald, where he was murdered on July 21, 1940.
Read more