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Selected Books on Bernard Malamud

Last modified on February 5, 2008


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Bibliographies on Bernard Malamud


Selected Books on Malamud: [The aim of this page is to introduce the content of each selected book on Bernard Malamud. As a first step, I list the table of contents of the Fields' Bernard Malamud and the Critics, the first monumental collection of articles on Malamud. Hopefully, you will get annotations of each book and/or article in the near future. (03/07/2000)]

[1966 Richman] [1970 Field] [1975 Field] [1977 Astro] [1979 Iwamoto]

[1980 Hershinow] [1981 Alter] [1985 Helterman] [1985 Salzberg] [1986 Bloom] [1987 Salzberg]

[1989 Solotaroff] [1990 Ochshorn] [1991 Lasher] [1991 Kosofsky] [1993 Abramson] [1996 Cheuse]

[2001 Avery] [2006 Smith] [2007 Davis]

Click on the red ball of each book to go back to the top.
1966 Richman, Sidney. Bernard Malamud. New York: Twayne Publishers, 160pp.

  • Preface
  • Chronology, p. 13.
  1. The Minority Writer as Majority, pp. 17-27.
    1. The "Jewishness" of Malamud, pp. 19-21.
    2. The Self Alone, pp. 21-23.
    3. Struggle for Roots, pp. 23-24.
    4. Literary Tradition, pp. 24-26.
    5. Malamud's Comic Mode, pp. 26-27.
  2. The Natural, pp. 29-49.
    1. Theme and Technique, pp. 29-31.
    2. Roy Hobbes, pp. 31-37.
    3. Iris Lemon, pp. 37-38.
    4. The Hero's Failure, pp. 38-40.
    5. The Pessimism ofThe Natural, pp. 40-44.
    6. Malamud's Achievement, pp. 44-49.
  3. The Assistant, pp. 50-77.
    1. The AssistantContrasted toThe Natural, pp. 51-52.
    2. Frank Alpine, pp. 52-58.
    3. Helen Bober, pp. 58-60.
    4. The Role of Love inThe Assistant, pp. 60-64.
    5. Morris Bober's Identity, pp. 64-69.
    6. The Moral Basis of The Assistant, pp. 69-72.
    7. Ambiguous Affirmation, pp. 72-74.
    8. Theme and Technique, pp. 75-77.
  4. A New Life, pp. 78-97.
    1. Function of the Setting, pp. 79-80.
    2. S. Levin, pp. 80-85.
    3. Structure and Character, pp. 85-88.
    4. Pauline Gilley, pp. 88-90.
    5. The Quest for Fatherhood, pp. 91-93.
    6. The Weakness of A New Life, pp. 93-97.
  5. The Stories, pp. 98-139.
      The Magic Barrel
    1. Literary Tradition, pp. 100-101.
    2. The Stories and the Novels, p. 101.
    3. The Tales of New York Jews, pp. 102-110.
    4. The New York Tales Without Jews, pp. 110-112.
    5. The Italian Stories, pp. 113-115.
    6. "The Last Mohican" and "The Magic Barrel", pp. 115-123.
      Idiots First
    1. The Transformation of the Early Fables, pp. 124-127.
    2. The Later Italian Stories, pp. 127-134.
    3. New Techniques, pp. 134-139.
  6. Conclusion, pp. 50-77.
    1. Idiots First compared to The Magic Barrel, pp. 140-141.
    2. Malamud's Literary Progress, pp. 141-145.
  • Notes and Reference, pp. 146-149.
  • Selected Bibliography, pp. 150-153.
  • Index, pp. 157-160.


1970 Field, Leslie A., and Field, Joyce W., eds. Bernard Malamud and the Critics. New York: New York University Press; London: University of London Press, 373 pp.

  • Introduction [by Leslie A. Field and Joyce W. Field]

  • Part 1: In the Jewish Tradition?
    1. Earl H. Rovit, "The Jewish Literary Tradition," pp. 3-10.
    2. Samuel Irving Bellman, "Women, Children, and Idiots First: Transformation Psychology," pp. 11-28.
    3. Robert Alter, "Jewishness as Metaphor," pp. 29-42.

  • Part 2: Myth, Ritual, Folklore
    1. Earl R. Wasserman, "The Natural: World Ceres," pp. 45-66.
    2. James M. Mellard, "Four Versions of Pastral," pp. 67-84.
    3. Edwin M. Eigner, "The Loathly Ladies," pp. 85-108.
    4. Frederick W. Turner, III, "Myth Inside and Out: The Natural," pp. 109-119.

  • Part 3: Varried Approaches
    1. Ben Siegel, "Victims in Motion: The Sad and Bitter Clowns," pp. 123-36.
    2. Sam Bluefarb, "The Scope of Caricature," pp. 137-50.
    3. Mark Goldman, "Comic Vision and the Theme of Identity," pp. 151-70.
    4. Charles Alva Hoyt, "The New Romanticism," pp. 171-84.
    5. Max F. Schultz, "Mythic Proletarians," pp. 185-95.

  • Part 4: Specific Novels and Stories

    The Assistant

    1. Ihab Hassan, "The Qualified Encounter," pp. 199-206.
    2. Walter Shear, "Culture Conflict," pp. 207-218.
    3. Peter L. Hays, "The Compex Pattern of Redemption," pp. 219-233.

    A New Life
    1. Theodore Solotaroff, "The Old Life and the New," pp. 235-248.
    2. Marcus Klein, "The Sadness of Goodness," pp. 249-260.
    3. Ruth B. Mandel, "Ironic Affirmation," pp. 261-274.

    The Fixer

    1. Maurice Friedberg, "History and Imagination--Two Views of the Beiliss Case," pp. 275-284.
    2. Alan Warren Friedman, "The Hero as Schnook," pp. 285-303.

    The Magic Barrel

    1. Sidney Richman, "The Stories," pp. 305-331.

  • Selected Bibliography, pp. 333-338.
  • Notes on Contributors, pp. 339-341.
  • Notes on the Editors, p. 343.
  • Index, pp. 345-353.

1975 Field, Leslie A., and Field, Joyce W., eds. Bernard Malamud: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, pp.

  • Introduction [by Leslie Field and Joyce Field]: Malamud, Mercy, and Menschlechkeit, pp. 1-7.
  • Leslie and Joyce Field, "An Interview with Bernard Malamud," pp. 8-17.
  • Sheldon Norman Grebstein, "Bernard Malamud and the Jewish Movement," pp. 18-44.
  • Sanford Pinsker, "Bernard Malamud's Ironic Heroes," pp. 45-71.
  • Sam Bluefarb, "The Syncretism of Bernard Malamud," pp. 72-79.
  • Cynthia Ozick, "Literary Blacks and Jews," pp. 80-98.
  • Renee Winegarten, "Malamud's Head (Rembrandt's Hat)," pp. 99-103.
  • John Alexander Allen, "The Promised End: Bernard Malamud's The Tenants," pp. 109-119.
  • Leslie Field, "Portrait of the Artist as Schlemiel (Pictures of Fidelman)," pp. 117-129.
  • Gerald Hoag, "Malamud's Trial: The Fixer and the Critics," pp. 130-142.
  • Richard Astro, "In the Heart of the Valley: Bernard Malamud's A New Life," pp. 143-155.
  • William Freedman, "From Bernard Malamud, with Discipline and with Love (The Assistant and The Natural," pp. 156-165.


  • Chronology of Important Dates, pp. 166-167.
  • Notes on the Editors and Contributors, pp. 168-169.
  • Works of Bernard Malamud, pp. 170-171.
  • Selected Bibliography, pp. 172-179.

1977 Astro, Richard, and Benson, Jackson J., eds. The Fiction of Bernard Malamud. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 190 pp.

  • Preface, pp. 5-7.
  • Contents, p. 9.
  • Contributors, pp. 11-12.


  • Jackson J. Benson, "An Introduction: Bernard Malamud and the Haunting of America," pp. 13-42.
  • Ihab Hassan, "Bernard Malamud: 1976. Fictions Within Our Fictions," pp. 43-64.
  • W. J. Handy, "The Malamud Hero: A Quest for Existence," pp. 65-86.
  • Peter L. Hays, "Malamud's Yiddish-Accented Medieval Stories," pp. 87-96.
  • Leslie Field, "Bernard Malamud and the Marginal Jew," pp. 97-116.
  • Ben Siegel, "Through A Glass Darkly: Bernard Malamud's Painful Views of the Self," pp. 117-147.
  • Leslie Fiedler, "The Many Names of S. Levin: An Essay in Genre Criticism," pp. 149-161.
  • Donal Risty, "A Checklist of Malamud Criticism," pp. 163-190.

1979 Iwamoto, Iwao. Malamud: Geijutsu to seikatsu o motomete [Malamud: In search of art and life]. Eibei Bungaku Sosho. Tokyo: Tojusha, 208 pp.

         [Click on Malamud: Geijutsu to seikatsu o motomete if you and your PC can read Japanese.]


1980 Hershinow, Sheldon J. Bernard Malamud. Modern Literature Monographs. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 165 pp.

  • Chronology, pp. vii-viii.
  1. The Writer as Moral Activist, pp. 1-15.
  2. The Hero in the Modern World: The Natural, pp. 16-28.
  3. The Prodigal Son Returns: The Assistant, pp. 29-47.
  4. The Schlemiel Out West: A New Life, pp. 48-62.
  5. Alienation and Aggression: The Fixer, pp. 63-75.
  6. The Artist as Schlemiel: Pictures of Fidelman: An Exhibition, pp. 76-88.
  7. Mankind's Divided Self: The Tenants, pp. 89-100.
  8. A New Life Revisited: Dubin's Lives, pp. 101-118.
  9. The Haunting of America: Malamud's Short Stories, pp. 119-134.
  10. Malamud's Moral and Artistic Vision, pp. 135-146.
  • Notes, pp. 147-150.
  • Bibliography, pp. 151-156.
  • Index, pp. 157-165.

1981 Alter, Iska Sheila. The Good Man's Dilemma: Social Criticism in the Fiction of Bernard Malamud. AMS Studies in Modern Literature, no. 5. New York: AMS Press, 214 pp.

  • Acknowledgements.
  1. The Good Man's Dilemma: The Natural, The Assistant, and American Materialism, pp. 1-26.
  2. The Good Man's Dilemma: A New Life and the Failure of the West as Eden, pp. 27-61.
  3. The Broader Canvas: Malamud, the Blacks, and the Jews, pp. 62-82.
  4. The Broader Canvas: Malamud and the Woman Question, pp. 83-113.
  5. The Broader Canvas: Malamud, Art, and the Artist, pp. 114-153.
  6. The Good Man's Dilemma: The Fixer, The Tenants, and the Historical Perspective, pp. 154-173.
  • Epilogue: Some Notes on Dubin's Lives: Biography and the Art of Possibilities, pp. 174-182.
  • Notes, pp. 183-198.
  • Bibliography, pp. 199-208.
  • Index, pp. 209-214.

1985 Helterman, Jeffrey. Understanding Bernard Malamud. University of South Carolina Press, 153pp.

  • Editor's Preface, p. vii.
  1. Understanding Bernard Malamud, pp. 1-22.
  2. The Natural, pp. 23-36.
  3. The Assistant, pp. 37-51.
  4. A New Life, pp. 52-65.
  5. The Fixer, pp. 66-79.
  6. Pictures of Fidelman and The Tenants, pp. 80-91.
  7. Dubin's Lives, pp. 92-106.
  8. God's Grace, pp. 107-123.
  9. Short Stories, pp. 124-139.
  • Bibliography, pp. 140-148.
  • Index, pp. 149-153.

1985 Salzberg, Joel. Bernard Malamud: A Reference Guide. Boston: G.H. Hall and Co., 211 pp.

[A massive annotated listing of the books, articles, book reviews, and doctoral dissertations arranged in the order of the year of publication--within the publication year category, arranged alphabetically by the author's name. Minimal errors and very reliable. The only drawback is that it is sometimes hard to sort out important articles from the numerous minor articles and maginal reviews.]
  • The Author, p. vi.
  • Preface, pp. vii-viii.
  • Introduction, pp. ix-xx.
  • Writings by Bernard Malamud, pp. xxi-xxii.
  • Writings about Bernard Malamud, 1952-1983, pp. 1-188.
  • Index, pp. 189-211.

1986 Bloom, Harold. Bernard Malamud. New York: Chelsea House, 231pp.

  • Editor's Note, pp. ix-x.


  • Introduction [by Harold Bloom], pp. 1-4.
  • Ihab Hassan, "The Qualified Encounter," pp. 5-10.
  • John Hollander, "To Find the Westward Path," pp. 11-14.
  • Alfred Kazin, "The Magic and the Dead," pp. 15-20.
  • Jonathan Baumbach, "The Economy of Love," pp. 21-36.
  • Herbert Leibowitz, "Malamud and the Anthropomorphic Business," pp. 37-40.
  • F. W. Dupee, "The Uses and Abuses of Commitment," pp. 41-46.
  • Earl R. Wasserman, "The Natural: Malamud's World Ceres," pp. 47-64.
  • V. S. Pritchett, "A Pariah," pp. 65-70.
  • Sidney Richman, "The Stories," pp. 71-100.
  • James M. Mellard, "Four Versions of Pastoral," pp. 101-112.
  • Alan Warren Friedman, "The Hero as Schnook," pp. 113-128.
  • Tony Tanner, "A New Life," pp. 129-150.
  • Allen Guttmann, "'All Men Are Jews'," pp. 151-158.
  • Ruth R. Wisse, "Requiem for the Schlemiel," pp. 159-166.
  • Robert Ducharme, "The Artist in Hell," pp. 167-178.
  • Mark Shechner, "The Return of the Repressed," pp. 179-186.
  • Robert Alter, "A Theological Fantasy," pp. 187-192.
  • Alvin B. Kernan, "The Tenants: 'Battering the Object'," pp. 193-206.
  • Sam B. Girgus, "In Search of the Real America," pp. 207-215.


  • Chronology, pp. 217-218.
  • Contributors, pp. 219-220.
  • Bibliography, pp. 221-223.
  • Acknowledgments, pp. 225-226.
  • Index, pp. 227-231.

1987 Salzberg, Joel. Critical Essays on Bernard Malamud. Edited by Joel Salzberg. Boston: G. K. Hall and Co., 229 pp.

  • Introduction [by Joel Salzberg], pp. 1-22.
  • Reviews, pp. 23-74.
    • Harvey Swados, "Baseball a la Wagner: The Nibelung in the Polo Grounds [Review of The Natural]," pp. 23-25.
    • Alfred Kazin, "Fantasist of the Ordinary [Review of The Assistant]," pp. 25-29.
    • Arthur Foff, "Strangers amid Ruins [Review of The Magic Barrel]," pp. 29-33.
    • Eugene Goodheart, "Fantasy and Reality [Review of A New Life]," pp. 33-37.
    • F. W. Dupee, "The Power of Positive Sex [Review of Idiots First]," pp. 37-41.
    • George P. Elliot, "Yakov's Ordeal [Review of The Fixer]," pp. 41-46.
    • Robert Scholes, "Portrait of Artist as 'Escape-Goat' [Review of Pictures of Fidelman]," pp. 47-51.
    • Morris Dickstein, [Review of The Tenants], pp. 51-57.
    • Leonard Michaels, "Sliding into English [Review of Rembrandt's Hat]," pp. 57-61.
    • Leon Edel, [The Biographer in Dubin's Lives]," pp. 61-64.
    • Robert Alter, "A Theological Fantasy [Review of God's Grace]," pp. 64-68.
    • Mark Shechner, "Sad Music [Review of The Stories of Bernard Malamud]," pp. 68-74.
  • Essays, pp. 75-221.
    • Iska Alter, "The Good Man's Dilemma: The Natural, The Assistant, and American Materialism," pp. 75-98.
    • Philip Roth, [From "Imagining Jews"], pp. 98-108.
    • J. Gerald Kennedy, "Parody as Exorcism: 'The Raven' and 'The Jewbird'," pp. 108-115.
    • Lawrence L. Langer, "Malamud's Jews and the Holocaust Experience," pp. 115-125.
    • Lucio P. Ruotolo, "Yakov Bok," pp. 125-139.
    • Christof Wegelin, "The American Schlemiel Abroad: Malamud's Italian Stories and the End of American Innocence," pp. 139-151.
    • Guio Fink, "'Ecco la chiavel!': Malamud's Italy as the Land of Copies," pp. 151-165.
    • Steven G. Kellman, "The Tenants in the House of Fiction," pp. 165-173.
    • Chiara Briganti, "Mirrors, Windows and Peeping Toms: Women as the Object of Voyeuristic Scrutiny in Bernard Malamud's A New Life and Dubin's Lives," pp. 174-186.
    • James M. Mellard, "The 'Perverse Economy' of Malamud's Art: A Lacanian Reading of Dubin's Lives," pp. 186-203.
    • Sidney Richman, "Malamud's Quarrel with God," pp. 203-221.
  • Index, pp. 223-229.

1989 Solotaroff, Robert. Bernard Malamud: A Study of the Short Fiction. Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction, Series No. 8. Boston: G.K. Hall, 200pp.

  • Preface, pp. xiii-xv.
  • Acknowledgments, pp. xvi-xvii.

  • Part 1. The Short Fiction: An Essay, pp. 1-140.
    • Beginnings, pp. 3-25.
    • The Magic Barrel, pp. 26-66.
    • Idiots First, pp. 67-89.
    • Pictures of Fidelman: An Exhibition, pp. 90-113.
    • Later Stories, pp. 114-133.
    • [Notes], pp. 133-140.

  • Part 2. The Writer, pp. 141-162
    • Malamud on Life and Art, pp. 143-161.
    • [Notes], pp. 161-162.

  • Part 3. The Critics, pp. 163-185.
    • Introduction, p. 165.
    • Theodore Solotaroff, "Bernard Malamud's Fiction: The Old Life and the New," pp. 166-169.
    • Charles E. May, "The Bread of Tears: Malamud's 'The Loan'," pp. 170-172.
    • Charles Angoff, "How 'Jewish' Are Jewish Writers in America?" pp. 172-173.
    • Mark Shechner, "Jewish Writers," pp. 173-176.
    • Beth Burch and Paul W. Burch, "Myth on Myth: Bernard Malamud's 'The Talking Horse'," pp. 176-180.
    • Philip Roth, "Pictures of Malamud," pp. 180-182.
    • Cynthia Ozick, "Remembrances: Bernard Malamud," pp. 183-185.

  • Chronology, pp. 187-188.
  • Bibliography, pp. 189-193.
  • Index, pp. 194-198.
  • The Author, p. 199.
  • The Editor, p. 200.

1990 Ochshorn, Kathleen Gillikin. The Heart's Essential Landscape: Bernard Malamud's Hero. New York: Peter Lang, 334pp.

  • Acknowledgements, p. vii.


  • Introduction, pp. 1-9.
  • The Natural and Roy Hobbs: An Early Pattern for the Malamud Hero, pp. 11-26.
  • The Assistant: The Malamud Hero as Disciple, pp. 27-49.
  • The Magic Barrel: Of Human Compassion, pp. 51-78.
  • The Unexpected Route to A New Life, pp. 79-111.
  • Idiots First: Shared Suffering on a Sinking Ship, pp. 113-140.
  • The Fixer: Great Hopes Pinned on One Small Man, pp. 141-170.
  • Pictures of Fidelman: The Hero as Would-Be Artist, pp. 171-195.
  • The Tenants or The Color of Art, pp. 197-218.
  • A Crown for Malamud in Rembrandt's Hat, pp. 219-248.
  • Dubin's Lives: The Malamud Hero Come of Middle Age, pp. 249-280.
  • Cohn's Fall From God's Grace, pp. 281-301.
  • Conclusion, pp. 303-321.


  • Literature Cited, pp. 323-334.

1991 Lasher, Lawrence M., ed. Conversations with Bernard Malamud. Jackson and London: University Press of Mississippi, 156 pp.

  • Introduction, pp. ix-xx.
  • Chronology, pp. xxi-xxiii.


  • Joseph Wershba, "Not Horror but Sadness," pp. 3-7.
    [The New York Post, 14 September, 1958.]
  • Jack Rosenthal, "Author Finds Room to Breathe in Corvallis," pp. 8-10.
    [The Oregonian (Portland), 12 April, 1959.]
  • Granville Hicks, "His Hope on the Human Heart," pp. 11-15.
    [Saturday Review, 12 October, 1963.]
  • Phyllis Meras, "An Interview with Its Author [The Fixer]," pp. 16-18.
    [The Providence Sunday Journal, 11 September, 1966.]
  • Haskel Frankel, "Bernard Malamud," pp. 19-21.
    [Saturday Review, 9 October, 1966.]
  • Harold Hughes, "The Man Behind The Fixer," pp. 22-26.
    [The Oregonian, 9 October, 1966.]
  • Ruth Ingliss, "The Book-Makers," pp. 27-28.
    [Nova, 17 August, 1967.]
  • Shlomo Kidron, "Malamud Explains Jewish Contribution to U.S. Writing," pp. 29-31.
    [The Jerusalem Post Week-End Magazine, 1 April, 1968.]
  • Israel Shenker, "For Malamud It's Story," pp. 32-34.
    [The New York Times Book Review, 3 October, 1971.]
  • Leslie and Joyce Field, "An Interview with Bernard Malamud," pp. 35-46.
    [Bernard Malamud: A Collection of Critical Essays, 1975.]
  • Curt Leviant, "My Characters Are God-Haunted," pp. 47-53.
    [Hadassah Magazine, 55 (June, 1974).]
  • Daniel Stern, "The Art of Fiction: Bernard Malamud," pp. 54-68.
    [Paris Review, 1975.]
  • E. H. Leelavathi Masilamoni, "Bernard Malamud - An Interview," pp. 69-73.
    [The Indian Journal of American Studies, 9 (1979).]
  • Mary Long, "Interview: Bernard Malamud," pp. 74-75.
    [Mademoiselle, 82 (August, 1976).]
  • John Marshall, "Author of A New Life Likes Coming Back," pp. 76-79.
    [The Gazette Times, Corvallis, Oregon, 5 May 1977).]
  • Ralph Tyler, "A Talk with the Novelist," pp. 80-85.
    [The New York Times Book Review, 18 February 1979.]
  • [U.S. News and World Report], "Novelist Malamud: Living Is Guessing What Reality Is," pp. 86-87.
    [U.S. News and World Report, 8 October 1979.]
  • Valerie Restivo, "Vermont: An Inspiration for Malamud," pp. 88-91.
    [Vermont Daily Herald, 5 May 1980.]
  • Michiko Kakutani, "Malamud Still Seeks Balance and Solitude," pp. 92-95.
    [The New York Times, 15 July 1980.]
  • Katha Pollit, "Creators on Creating: Bernard Malamud," pp. 96-101.
    [Saturday Review, February 1981.]
  • Ji-moon Koh, "A Talk with Bernard Malamud," pp. 102-110.
    [Major Themes in Contemporary American Novel, (Seoul, Korea, 1984). A 1982 interview while Malamud was in Pao Alto, California.]
  • Curt Suplee, "God, Bernard Malamud, and the Ribirth of Man," pp. 111-118.
    [The Washington Post, 27 August 1982. Significant comments on God's Grace.]
  • Leah Garchik, "Malamud's Sense of Despair," pp. 119-122.
    [San Francisco Chronicle Review, 5 September 1982.]
  • Karen Heller, "Malamud's Long View of Short Stories," pp. 123-126.
    [USA Today, 19 August 1983.]
  • Joel Salzberg, "An Interview with Bernard Malamud," pp. 127-129.
    [Previously unpublished interview took place in NYC on June 21, 1983.]
  • Helen Benedict, "Bernard Malamud: Morals and Surprises," pp. 130-138.
    [Antioch Review, 41, no. 1 (Winter 1983).]
  • Joel Salzberg, "Malamud's Last Interview? A Memoir," pp. 139-144.
    [Studies in American Jewish Literature, 7, no. 2 (Fall 1988). The interview took place on January 27, 1986.]
  • Evelyn Avery, "Remembrances of Malamud: 1972-1986," pp. 145-151.
    [Written for this book.]


  • Index, pp. 153-156.

1991 Kosofsky, Rita Nathalie. Bernard Malamud: A Descriptive Bibliography. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 263pp.

  • Preface, pp. vii-ix.
  • Introduction, pp. xi-xxv.
  • Chronology, pp. xxvii-xxx
  • The Works of Bernard Malamud, pp. 1-8
    • Books, pp. 1-3.
    • Stories in Periodicals, pp. 3-7.
    • Other Writings, pp. 7-8.
    • Juvenilia, p. 8.
    • Bernard Malamud's Papers, p. 8.
  • Translations of Malamud's Works, pp. 9-23.
    [Translations of The Natural are curiously missing.]
    • The Assistant, pp. 9-11.
    • The Magic Barrel, pp. 11-12.
    • A New Life, pp. 12-14.
    • Idiots First, pp. 14-15.
    • The Fixer, pp. 15-17.
    • Pictures of Fidelman: An Exhibition, pp. 17-18.
    • The Tenants, pp. 18-19.
    • Rembrandt's Hat, pp. 19-20.
    • Dubin's Lives, pp. 20-21.
    • God's Grace, pp. 21-22.
    • The Stories of Bernard Malamud, p. 22.
    • The People and Uncollected Stories, p. 22.
    • [Note], p. 23.
  • Critical Essays about Malamud's Works, pp. 25-138.
  • Reviews of Malamud's Works, pp. 139-236.
    • The Natural, pp. 139-142.
    • The Assistant, pp. 142-146.
    • The Magic Barrel, pp. 147-152.
    • A New Life, pp. 153-159.
    • Idiots First, pp. 159-164.
    • The Fixer, pp. 165-178.
    • A Malamud Reader, pp. 178-180.
    • Pictures of Fidelman: An Exhibition, pp. 180-186.
    • The Tenants, pp. 186-195.
    • Rembrandt's Hat, pp. 195-200.
    • Dubin's Lives, pp. 201-212.
    • God's Grace, pp. 212-222.
    • The Stories of Bernard Malamud, pp. 222-228.
    • The People and Uncollected Stories, pp. 228-236.
  • Ph.D. Dissertations about Malamud's Works, pp. 237-250.
  • Index, pp. 251-263.
  • [About the Author, p. 265.]

1993 Abramson, Edward A. Bernard Malamud Revisited. New York, New York: Twayne Publishers, 163pp.

  • Preface, p. ix.
  • Chronology, pp. xi-xii.
  1. Growing Up in Brooklyn, pp. 1-8.
  2. The Natural, pp. 9-24.
  3. The Assistant, pp. 25-42.
  4. A New Life, pp. 43-57.
  5. The Fixer, pp. 58-75.
  6. Pictures of Fidelman: An Exhibition, pp. 76-89.
  7. The Tenants, pp. 90-100.
  8. Dubin's Lives, pp. 101-113.
  9. God's Grace, pp. 114-127.
  10. The Short Stories, pp. 128-138.
  11. A Postscript on The People, pp. 139-140.
  12. Art Tending toward Morality, pp. 141-145.
  • Notes and References, pp. 147-154.
  • Selected Bibliography, pp. 155-157.
  • Index, pp. 159-162.
  • The Author, p. 163.

1996 Cheuse, and Nicholas Delbanco, ed. Talking Horse: Bernard Malamud on Life and Work. New York, New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 220pp.

  • Acknowledgments, p. xi.
  • Introduction, pp. xiii-xxiv.


  • Part One: The Man and His Work, pp. 1-35.
    1. Introduction to The Stories of Bernard Malamud, 1983, pp. 5-9.
    2. The Writer at Work, pp. 10-24.
    3. Long Work, Short Life, pp. 25-35.

  • Part Two: The Man on His Work, pp. 37-89
    1. The Natural: Raison d'Etre and Meaning, pp. 41-46.
    2. Why Fantasy?, pp. 47-61.
    3. The Magic Barrel, pp. 62-85.
    4. A Note to My Norwegian Readers on The Assistant, pp. 86-87.
    5. Source of The Fixer, pp. 88-89.

  • Part Three: The Writer and His Craft, pp. 91-157.
    1. Beginning the Novel, pp. 95-106.
    2. Finding One's Voice, pp. 107-110.
    3. On Subject Matter, pp. 111-116.
    4. The Short Story, pp. 117-118.
    5. Questions and Answers in Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 119-129.
    6. Psychoanalysis and Literary Criticism, pp. 130-135.
    7. Jewishness in American Fiction, pp. 136-146.
    8. Notes on The People, pp. 147-157.

  • Part Four: The Writer in the Modern World, pp. 159-220.
    1. A World Association of Writers, pp. 164-165.
    2. Freedom of Expression, pp. 166-171.
    3. Bennington College Commencement Address, pp. 172-178.
    4. Bennington Writing Workshops, pp. 179-180.
    5. Jewish Herritage Award Presentation Address, pp. 181-183.
    6. Imaginative Writing and the Jewish Experience, pp. 184-190.
    7. The Contemporary Novel, pp. 191-199.
    8. The Writer in the Modern World, pp. 200-214.
    9. An Idea That Animates My Writing, pp. 215-216.
    10. A Mighty Theme, pp. 217-220.

2001 Avery, Evelyn, ed. The Magic Worlds of Bernard Malamud.. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 219pp.

  • Preface, pp. ix-x.
  • Introduction, pp. xi-xvii.

  • I. The Author
    1. Malamud in Corvallis: Memories of Dad, pp. 3-11.
         Paul Malamud
    2. Recollecting Bernie, pp. 13-23.
         Colleagues at Oregon State, Interviewed by Paul Malamud
    3. Remembrances: Bernard Malamud, pp. 25-27.
         Cynthia Ozick
    4. Malamud: Seen and Unseen, pp. 29-33.
         Daniel Stern
    5. On The Magic Barrel, pp. 35-42.
         Nicholas Delbanco
    6. The Rhythms of Friendship in the Life of Art: The Correspondence of Bernard Malamud and Rosemarie Beck, pp. 43-56.
         Joel Salzberg

  • II. Individual Works
    1. America and the History of the Jews in Bernard Malamud's "The Last Mohican," pp. 59-68.
         Karen L. Polster
    2. Zen Buddhism and The Assistant: A Grocery as a Training Monastery, pp. 69-86.
         Edward A. Abramson
    3. Malamud's New [Academic] Life--and Ours, pp. 87-100.
         Sanford Pinsker
    4. The Lives of Dubin, pp. 101-110.
         Walter Shear
    5. Gorilla in the Myth: Malamud's God's Grace, pp. 111-119.
         D. Mesher

  • III. Thematic Threads: Patterns in Malamud's Fiction
    1. Reflections on Transmogrified Yiddish Archetypes in Fiction by Bernard Malamud, pp. 123-138.
         S. Lillian Kremer
    2. Not True Although Truth: The Holocaust's Legacy in Three Malamuds Stories: "The German Refugee," "Man in the Drawer," and "The Lady of the Lake," pp. 139-152.
         Eileen H. Watts
    3. Bernard and Juliet: Romances and Desire in Malamud's High Art, pp. 153-160.
         Alan Cheuse
    4. Bernard Malamud and Cynthia Ozick: Kindred Neshamas, pp. 161-166.
         Evelyn Avery
    5. Bernard Malamud and His Universal Menschen, pp. 167-173.
         Daniel Walden
    6. A Kind of Vigilacnce: Tropic Suspension in Bernard Malamud's Fiction, pp. 175-186.
         Victoria Aarons

  • IV. Annotated Select Bibliography
    • Annotated Select Bibliography, pp. 189-208.
         Eileen H. Watts
  • Contributors List, pp. 209-211.
  • Index, pp. 213-219.

2006 Smith, Janna Malamud. My Father Is a Book: A Memoir of Bernard Malamud. New York, New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 292pp.

  • Preface, pp. ix-xi.
  1. Early Stories, pp. 1-26.
  2. The Early Journals, pp. 27-64.
  3. Courtship, pp. 65-81.
  4. The Year I Was Born, pp. 82-123.
  5. Corvallis, pp. 124-159.
  6. Bennington and Its College, pp. 160-191.
  7. Bennington Girl, pp. 192-225.
  8. Thanksgiving, pp. 226-243.
  9. Heart, pp. 244-261.
  • A Chronology of Bernard Malamud's Life, pp. 263-265.
  • Appendix: Other Voices, pp. 266-282.
  • Notes, pp. 283-290.
  • Acknowledgements, pp. 291-292.

2007 Davis, Philip. Bernard Malamud: A Writer's Life. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 377pp.

  • Preface, pp. vi-xii.
  • List of Abbreveations, p. xiv.
  • List of Illustrations, pp. xv-xvii.
  • Chronology, pp. xviii-xxii.


  • THE FIRST LIFE, pp. 3-67.
    1. The Inheritance, pp. 3-29.
    2. The Long Adolescence, pp. 30-67.

  • THE SECOND LIFE, pp. 69-181
    1. Oregon, pp. 71-112.
    2. The Assistant, pp. 113-140.
    3. 'Because I Can', pp. 141-181.

  • THE THIRD LIFE, pp. 183-314.
    1. The Beginning of the Middle Years, pp. 185-229.
    2. 'We need some sort of poverty in our lives', pp. 230-263.
    3. From The Fixer towards Dubin, pp. 264-290.
    4. Dubin's Lives, pp. 291-314.

  • IN HIS LAST LIFE, pp. 315-351.
    1. As you are grooved so you are graved', pp. 317-351.

  • Notes, pp. 352-368.
  • Index, pp. 369-377.

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