Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Potok, Chaim (Vol. 112) - Richard Freedman (review date 14 September 1969)


Potok, Chaim (Vol. 112) - Richard Freedman (review date 14 September 1969)

Richard Freedman (review date 14 September 1969)

SOURCE: "A Warm Glow in a Cruel, Cold World," in Washington Post Book World, September 14, 1969, p. 3.

[In the following review, Freedman commends Potok's "vivid" characterizations and narrative presentation of The Promise, but finds shortcomings in his excessive exposition of Jewish theology.]

One of the few remaining pleasures we get from reading popular contemporary novels is that they are filled with well-researched information about a particular place, occupation or way of life. This helps salve the consciences of the swelling horde of readers who feel that fiction is a waste of time.

Thus, from Hawaii we learn the detailed history of that exotic state, and Airport tells us why we are right to prefer trains. This massive accumulation of facts, with a banal story line and styrofoam characters, is not the loftiest goal of fiction, but it is a time-honored one....

[The entire page is 760 words long]

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