![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4LhmRR1cC4lcxVK5tYzbX8t_-4QaT4_qmypEMQ603iMLfQHIZ7oLWG2QtTFEVDNgyXK54hk3BnddDes3btAEOwloEpXO4vKc_38FtF67dv1uMmmA0vJo0RgrLFj6jmyAd2mQMc40859k/s320/Apple.jpg)
I'm particularly intrigued by the way Apple handles some potentially dicey cross-cultural issues (black-Jewish relations, in particular). Incidentally, despite the book's title and coverage in the Jewish press, the opening story, "Yao's Chick," is not overtly "Jewish" in terms of its characters or content. Apple is apparently not intimidated to write about characters from different ethnic backgrounds. I think that's a good and admirable thing, but I can't help wondering if that's worked against him in some readers' eyes.
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Litman's primary subject--running through the linked stories--is life within the Russian-Jewish immigrant community in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Different from Apple's work, to be sure; reading them sequentially and considering them together I'm reminded of something that's too often lost in discussions of "Jewish-American literature"--how truly varied it can be.
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