Henry Roth

1905–1995

Henry Roth, who was born in the Galicia region of Austria-Hungary, immigrated to the United States as an infant. A novelist and memoirist, he described the experiences and captured the dialect of Jewish immigrants in New York. He graduated from the City College of New York in 1928. He lived with and was supported by an English professor, Eda Lou Walton, a Protestant, for ten years while he wrote his most successful piece, the novel Call It Sleep. Although it was well received at the time, the novel and the author were soon forgotten. It was rediscovered in the 1960s and widely recognized as a modernist masterpiece. Both a distinguished proletarian novel and a powerful portrait of the terror of family life from the perspective of a child, the novel is notable for its sensitivity to the bilingualism of immigrant Jews. Roth settled in New Mexico and published additional volumes later in life. He received a grant from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, the Townsend Harris Medal, and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Call It Sleep

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Another week had passed. The two men had just gone off together. With something of an annoyed laugh, his mother went to the door and stood fingering the catch of the lock. Finally she lifted it…

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Mercy of a Rude Stream

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…He heard a thud in the living room, heard a thud, and couldn’t identify it: “Are you all right?” he called. “I was just being careless,” M called back. “I’m all right.” “You fell. Poor kid. What’d…