Joshua Then and Now
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Joshua Then and Now is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Mordecai Richler, first published in 1980 by McClelland and Stewart. Richler adapted it into the feature film Joshua Then and Now, starring James Woods, Alan Arkin, and Gabrielle Lazure; directed by Ted Kotcheff who had previously directed Richler's The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz.
The book is a humorous, sarcastic, and stangely sentimental rendering based on his neighborhoood when he was growing up in Montreal, Canada and then the triumphs and disasters of a successful writer. Joseph Heller described it as "wildly funny".
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[edit] Plot summary
Joshua Shapiro, successful writer and pundit, in a hospital room, seems to have lost his wife and is in the middle of a sex scandal. Compelled to find meaning in his life, he reviews it from his youth to the present day.
Joshua grew up as a Jew in the working class St. Urbain Street area in Montreal. His upbringing was unusual because his father was a boxer who had become a gentle crook and his mother was a strip-tease dancer. Embarrassingly, she strips for his friends as part of a Bar Mitzvah party for him. Joshua's father is revealed to have a unique perspective on life, sex, and religion.
A trip to Spain as a young man is the impetus that sparks a career as a journalist and writer. In England in a momentary lapse of reason, Joshua forges letters about a (fake) homosexual affair with a British writer to sell to an American university archive. He meets an upper-class Canadian married to a poser of a communist and steals her away to become his own wife. She is the daughter of a Canadian senator and Joshua's key into a level of society that he is contemptuous of.
In the meantime, Joshua's childhood friends have become successful in their own right. They soon become targets for pranks as he settles various scores.
Joshua's brother-in-law becomes a pivot of the novel as it is revealed he is malleable. Upper crust neighbors in the summer country homes of the rich lead him astray with dreadful consequences. Old past discretions rear their ugly heads, and Joshua must put together the shambles of his life.
[edit] Notes
- Selected by Time as one of the five best novels of 1980.[1]
- The scenes of the William Lyon Mackenzie King Memorial Society were not included in the movie.
[edit] Editions
- McClelland & Stewart, 1980, hardcover, ISBN 0-7710-7492-1
- Knopf, 1980, first edition, hardcover, 435 pg., ISBN 0-394-49351-6
- paperback editions: Bantam 1981, Granada 1982, Bantam Canada 1985, Penguin USA 1991, McLelland & Stewart 1991, Emblem 2001, Buchet-Chastel 2004.[2]
- New Canadian Library (McClelland & Stewart), 1989, 441 p. ISBN 0-7710-9864-2
- Joshua au passé, au présent. Translated by Paule Noyart. Montréal: Les Quinze, 1989. 537 p., ISBN 2-89026-386-X