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JEWBILLY by Rick Rosenberg

JEWBILLY

by Rick Rosenberg

Pub Date: Jan. 17th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-66780-680-8
Publisher: BookBaby

Rosenberg’s debut coming-of-age novel tells an eventful story of a young New Yorker’s life in the South.

After a brief prologue, the story opens by setting the scene of Yosef Bamberger’s old life, before everything changed for him and his family. In 1970s Brooklyn, he was a 12-year-old boy who was looking forward to his bar mitzvah, enjoyed playing arcade games with his classmates, and had few worries. On the evening of his birthday, however, his father dropped a bomb, announcing that they were all moving to Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Once they get there, Yosef is determined to make at least one friend as quickly as possible, and he does: Calvin Macafee, whom Yosef describes as “a giant, freckled, redhead redneck of Scotch-Irish descent”—someone who has a different background, a different religion, a different family structure, and a different worldview than Yosef. However, this doesn’t stop the pair from getting up to lighthearted and fun adventures. By the time they’re in high school, however, they encounter drugs, alcohol, and even get involved in a murder case involving a member of Calvin’s family. Rosenberg’s novel ambitiously tackles themes of religion, bigotry, family, and puberty, and presents these concepts and experiences in a refreshingly offbeat way. It discusses difficult issues, such as prejudice, in a smart, hard-hitting manner, while simultaneously developing Yosef’s character as a sweet and likable young man. Historical novels of adolescence are common, but this one has substance and diversity that others in the genre often lack, and it handles its heavy themes in a skillful way that results in moments of unexpected profundity.

A heartwarming and idiosyncratic story of personal growth and friendship.