chutzpah—Gall, brazen nerve, audacity, presumption-plus-arrogance such as no other word, and no other language, can do justice to.
dreck—Shit, dung, garbage, trash, excrement, crap.
Evsise—A native of Theta 996:VI, Cluster Messier 3 in Canes Venatici. (See illustration.)
farblondjet—Lost (but really lost), mixed-up, wandering around with no idea where you are.
farchachdah—Dizzy, confused, dopey, punchy.
feh!—An exclamatory expression of disgust.
folks-mensh—This has many meanings. In the story it is intended to convey the meaning of a person who is interested in Jewish life, values, experience, and wants to carry on the tradition,
galus—An exile.
Gentile—The goyim. Non-Jews.
gevalt!—A cry of fear, astonishment, amazement.
glitch—A shady, not kosher or reputable affair.
goldeneh medina—Literally, “golden country”; originally, it meant America to Jews fleeing the European pogroms; a land of freedom, justice, and rare opportunity. Well, two out of three ain’t bad.
gonif(s)—A thief, a crook; sometimes said with affection
goniffed—to mean a clever person; a dishonest businessman; the act of stealing, as in swiping Zsouchmuhn out of its orbit,
guderim—My mother used to say, “That kid is eating out my guderim from aggravation,” which leads me to believe the word means, literally, heart, guts, liver-and-lights, stomach, everything in the middle of your body. Pronounced: guh-DARE-im.
Kaddish—A prayer glorifying God’s name. The most solemn and one of the most ancient of all Jewish prayers; the mourner’s prayer.
kayn-ahora—The phrase uttered to show that one’s praises are genuine and not contaminated by envy.
kike—A word you won’t find in this story.
kosher—As a Hebrew-Yiddish word it means only one thing: fit to eat, because ritually clean according to the dietary laws. As American slang it means authentic, the real McCoy, trustworthy, reliable, on the up-and-up, legal.
krenk—An illness. Also used to mean “nothing” in a sentence like, “He asked me for a loan of fifty bucks; a krenk I’ll give him!”
mechaieh—Pleasure, great enjoyment, a real joy. Pronounced: m’-KHY-eh, if you roll the kh like a Scotsman.
mensch—Someone of consequence, someone to emulate and admire; a terrific human being; I always pictured a mensch as someone who knew exactly how much to tip.
meshiginah, meshugge, mishegoss—Crazy, nuts, wildly extravagant, absurd. There are spellings for male and female, but I’ve written it the way it sounded when my mother called me it. Meshugge is to be a meshiginah and mishegoss is the crazy stuff a meshiginah is doing.
minyan—Quorum. The ten male Jews required for a religious service. Solitary prayer is laudable, but a minyan possesses special merit, for God’s Presence is said to dwell among them.
momzer—A bastard, an untrustworthy person; a stubborn, difficult person; a detestable, impudent person.
naches—Proud pleasure, special joy, pride-plus-pleasure.
nafkeh—Also nafka. A prostitute.
nu(?)(!)—A remarkably versatile interjection, interrogation, expletive; like, “So?”
nuhdz, nuhdzhing—To bore, to pester, to nag, to be bugged to eat your asparagus, to wake up and take her home, etc.
oysvorf—A scoundrel, a bum, an outcast, an ingrate.
pisher—A young, inexperienced person, a “young squirt,” an inconsequential person, a “nobody.”
plotz—To split, to burst, to explode; to be outraged; to be aggravated beyond bearing.
punim—Face.
pupik—Navel. Belly-button.
putz—Literally, vulgar slang for “penis” but in usage a term of contempt for an ass, a jerk, a fool, a simpleton or yokel. It is much stronger than schmuck and shouldn’t be used unless you know some crippling Oriental martial art-form.
Reb—Rabbi.
schlemiel—A foolish person, a simpleton; a consistently unlucky or unfortunate person; a clumsy, gauche, butterfingered person; a social misfit; this term is more pitying than schlimazel and more affectionate by far than schmuck.
schlimazel—Same as above, but different in tone. A schlimazel believes in luck, but never has any. The terms are often interchangeable, by people who don’t perceive the subtle differences.
schmuck—Literally, a penis, but in common usage, a dope, a jerk, a boob; or, a son of a bitch.
Shabbes—The Sabbath.
Shema—The first word of the most common of Hebrew prayers: “Shema Yisrael,” Hear O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is One!
shikker—A drunk or, as an adjective, drunkenness.
shikseh—A non-Jewish woman, especially a young one.
shivah—The seven solemn days of mourning for the dead.
shmachel—To flatter, to fawn, to butter up, usually to outfox someone to get them to do what you want.
shmatehs—A rag, literally. But in common usage to mean a cheap, shoddy, junky dress.
shmootz—Dirt.
shoul—Synagogue.
shpilkess—As my mother used it, to mean aggravation, an unsettlement of self, jumping stomach. But I’ve been advised it really means “ants in the pants.”
Shtumie—Another word like schlemiel, but more offhand, less significant; the word you use to bat away a gnat.
shtup—To have sexual intercourse.
shtupping—See shtup.
tallis—Prayer shawl, used by males at prayer at religious services.
Talmud—A massive and monumental compendium of sixty-three books: the learned debates, dialogues, conclusions, commentaries, etc., of the scholars who, for over a thousand years, interpreted the Torah, the first five books in the Bible, also known as the Five Books of Moses. The Talmud is not the Bible, it is not the Old Testament. It is not meant to be read, but to be studied.
t’fillin—Phylacteries worn during morning prayers by Orthodox males past the age of bar mitzvah.
Tisha B’ab—“The blackest day in the Jewish calendar.” Usually falls during August, climaxing nine days of mourning during which meat is not eaten and marriages are not performed. Commemorates both the First (586 B.C.) and Second (A.D. 70) destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. A deadly day of sorrow.
tsuris—Troubles.
tuchis—The backside, the buttocks, your ass.
tummel—Noise, commotion, noisy disorder.
tummeler—One who creates a lot of noise but accomplishes little; a fun-maker, a live wire, a clown, the “life of the party.” You know when Jerry Lewis does a talk show and he starts eating the draperies and screaming and running so much you change the channel? He’s tummeling.
varf—To puke. Brechh.
yarmulkah—The skullcap worn by observing Jewish males.
yeshiva—A rabbinical college or seminary.
yorzeit—The anniversary of someone’s death, on which candles are lit and an annual prayer is said.
zetz—A strong blow or punch.
Zsouchmoid—A native of Theta 996:VI, Cluster Messier 3 in Canes Venatici, like Evsise. (See illustration.)
(NOTE: The author wishes to give credit where due. The Yiddish words are mine, they come out of my childhood and my heritage, but the definitions were compiled with the aid of Leo Rosten’s marvelous and utterly indispensable sourcebook, The Joys of Yiddish, published by McGraw-Hill, which I urge you to rush out and buy, simply as good reading.)
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About the Au
thor
Jack Dann has written and edited over sixty books, including Wandering Stars: An Anthology of Jewish Fantasy and Science Fiction; More Wandering Stars: An Anthology of Outstanding Stories of Jewish Fantasy and Science Fiction (Jewish Lights); and the international bestselling novel about Leonardo da Vinci, The Memory Cathedral. Already translated into ten languages, The Memory Cathedral won Australia’s Aurealis Award and a selection won the coveted Nebula Award. He lives in Australia on a farm overlooking the sea and “commutes” back and forth to Los Angeles and New York. Visit his website at www.jackdann.com.
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Wandering Stars:
An Anthology of Jewish Fantasy & Science Fiction
2013 First Digital Edition
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information regarding permission to reprint material from this book, please mail or fax your request in writing to Jewish Lights Publishing, Permissions Department, at the address/fax number listed below, or e-mail your request to [email protected].
Copyright © 1974 by Jack Dann
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wandering stars: an anthology of Jewish fantasy & science fiction / edited by Jack Dann; with an introduction by Isaac Asimov.
p. cm.
Originally published: New York: Harper & Row, 1974.
Contents: On Venus, have we got a rabbi / William Tenn—The golem / Avram Davidson—Unto the fourth generation / Isaac Asimov—Look, you think you’ve got troubles / Carol Carr—Goslin Day / Avram Davidson— The dybbuk of mazel tov IV / Robert Silverberg—Trouble with water / Horace L. Gold—Gather blue roses / Pamela Sargent—The jewbird / Bernard Malamud—Paradise last / Geo. Alec Effinger—Street of dreams, feet of clay / Robert Sheckley—Jachid and Jechidah / Isaac Bashevis Singer—I’m looking for Kadak / Harlan Ellison
1. Fantastic fiction, American—Jewish authors. 2. Science fiction,
American—Jewish authors. 3. Jews—Fiction. I. Dann, Jack.
PS648.F3W36 1998
813’.0876088924—dc21 98-10588 CIP
ISBN 13: 978-1-58023-005-6 (quality pbk.)
ISBN-10: 1-58023-005-9 (quality pbk.)
10 9 8 7 6 5 4
Manufactured in the United States of America
Acknowledgment is made for permission to print the following material:
“On Venus, Have We Got a Rabbi” by William Tenn. Copyright © 1974 by William Tenn.
“The Golem” by Avram Davidson. Copyright © 1955 by Fantasy House, Inc. Reprinted by permission of the author.
“Unto the Fourth Generation” by Isaac Asimov. Copyright © 1959 by Mercury Press. Reprinted by permission of the author.
“Look, You Think You’ve Got Troubles” by Carol Carr. Copyright © 1969 by Damon Knight. Reprinted by permission of the author.
“Goslin Day” by Avram Davidson. Copyright © 1970 by Damon Knight. Reprinted by permission of the author.
“The Dybbuk of Mazel Tov IV” by Robert Silverberg. Copyright © 1974 by Robert Silverberg.
“Trouble With Water” by Horace L. Gold. Copyright © 1939 by Street & Smith. Reprinted by permission of the author.
“Gather Blue Roses” by Pamela Sargent. Copyright © 1971 by Mercury Press, Inc. From The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, by permission of the author.
“The Jewbird” by Bernard Malamud. Reprinted with the permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc., from Idiots First by Bernard Malamud, copyright © 1963 by Bernard Malamud.
“Paradise Last” by Geo. Alec Effinger. Copyright © 1974 by Geo. Alec Effinger.
“Street of Dreams, Feet of Clay” by Robert Sheckley. Copyright © 1968 by Robert Sheckley. From Galaxy Magazine, reprinted by permission of the author and the author’s agent, Sterling Lord Agency, Inc.
“Jachid and Jechidah” by Isaac Bashevis Singer. Reprinted with the permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc., from Short Friday by Isaac Bashevis Singer, copyright © 1964 by Isaac Bashevis Singer.
“I’m Looking for Kadak” by Harlan Ellison. Copyright © 1974 by Harlan Ellison.
Cover art: Genesis: Fourth Day (© 1996) was created by Michael Bogdanow, an artist, lawyer, and musician living with his wife and children in Lexington, Massachusetts. Genesis: Fourth Day is part of his “Visions of Torah” series of contemporary, spiritual works of art based on Torah and other Judaic texts.
Cover design: Maria O’DonNell
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