Set largely among the Jewish community of inter-war New York City, this is a beautifully-told collection of scenes from Morgenstern's life. The tricky ground of writing the advice column for a provincial Yiddish daily; successes during, and hard times after, the Depression; a position at the top of his craft as a labour specialist in the New York City Yiddish press - these and many more form a portrait of "a fundamentally decent man in morally perplexing situations".
"I've been working on a series of stories about the character I call "my father" - loosely based on my own father - for about 30 years.I wondered if I could use the character in other situations. One] story had begun with a spark of truth - a story my father had told many times about a foolish man he'd once known - and the spirit of my father. "All the stories in the series walk that precarious tightrope between memoir and fiction."I worked hard, with the stories' structure and a sort of old-fashioned expository style, to make them feel like memoir - like truth."