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Katz or Cats

or, How Jesus Became My Rival in Love

Curt Leviant

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Beschreibung

Katz or Cats, or How Jesus Became My Rival in Love follows John, a book editor who meets an enigmatic man named Katz on his daily commute into New York. True to form, Katz has a book to pitch—not his own, but his brother’s, an identical twin also named Katz. The novel begins with another meeting on another train: brother Katz chances on a woman named Maria, who carries a pocket Bible and is missing the top digit of her ring finger.

The two embark on a whirlwind affair, alternately driven together and apart by their passion for each other and Maria’s religious fervor. But the story seems to change as soon as Katz tells it, and Katz himself has a great confession to make. As the lies that bind the tale together grow to new proportion, John comes to doubt the line between truth and fiction, as well as everything he thinks he knows about the man beside him on the train.

With the lyrical joy and lighthearted wordplay that have won him critical acclaim, Curt Leviant’s latest novel explores the very fabric of storytelling and whether life, like fiction, can be in constant flux.

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Jewish-American identity, parody, Jewish festivals, Jewish-American literature, contemporary fiction, American literature, American novel, Christianity, Yiddish, Gospels, Jewish-American suburbs, Jewish literature, religion, ethnic fiction, New Testament, New York City, homeland, fiction, experimental fiction, goyim, teller, literary fiction, postmodernism, American fiction, death of the novel, urban life, diasporic literature, unreliable narration, American cities, Judaism, movies in literature, American Jews, Protestantism, beauty, eroticism, names, Song of Songs in literature, New England, family in literature, Kafka in literature, humor in literature, interethnic romance, Boston, humanities, Western religion, self-referential literature, comic fiction, Old Testament, Christians, goy, Jewish diaspora, absurd, cats, novel, Bible in literature, writers, Jews in diaspora, absurdism, New York, Western civilization, tale, intercultural communication, romantic fiction, urban fiction, Jerusalem, gender, humor, Judeo-Christian, love, writing in literature, eros in literature, family, English, Catholicism, editors, sex in literature, Chekhov in literature, marriage, twins, English literature, New Jersey, Holy Land, Jewish fiction, Israel, body, music in literature, German, urban, religious conversion, romance, flashback in literature, cinema, Yiddish in English literature, Jewish, work, Newark, culture, narrative, romance in fiction, diaspora, narrator, trains, Hebrew, literature, postmodernity, postmodern, Jesus, transportation, synagogue, conversion, Heller in literature, ethnicity, divorce, Yom Kippur, novelist, break-up, metafiction, America, Kol Nidrei, holidays, sexuality, satire, friendship, English language, romantic comedy, experimental literature, Mozart in literature, in medias res, courtship in literature, entertainment in literature, intermarriage, Ashkenazi Jewish literature, comedy, unreliable narrators