My Lover, the Rabbi
A Novel
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- Vorbestellbar
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- Erwartet am 17. März 2026
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- 10,99 €
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- Vorbestellbar
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A psychosexual relationship between a rabbi and the man devoted to him goes off the rails in this explosive novel.
The rabbi is, to the untrained eye, far from desirable. Lofty and disorderly, aging and constantly losing members of his flock, he is nonetheless the singular object of obsession for the self-abjecting narrator of My Lover, the Rabbi. From the start of their psychosexual affair, the two men torment, pleasure, and manipulate each other with ardor. When they’re apart, the narrator manically contemplates every element of the rabbi’s being: his alluring adopted son, his false erudition, his patrilineage, his broken-down Pontiac, his out-of-state husband (who the narrator has also slept with), and, maybe most of all, the universe between the rabbi’s legs. Spending time together in the narrator's bed, in a tiny town near Hoboken, New Jersey, that our narrator is “devastated to admit is my personal address,” a tender, volatile intimacy brews and curdles. To sustain it, the narrator continues on an unrelenting, increasingly urgent quest to understand the mercurial, ardent rabbi's mysterious past—that is, until he begins to question reality itself. In the process, conflicting truths about the rabbi emerge, with drastic consequences for both men and those around them.
The first novel in nearly twenty years from one of our most acclaimed stylists, Wayne Koestenbaum’s My Lover, the Rabbi is a sui generis spiral of lascivious thrills and uncanny hilarity, exposing in delirious detail the dangers—and spoils—of true love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The unnamed narrator of Koestenbaum's uproarious latest (after The Cheerful Scapegoat) recounts his affair with a male rabbi. Composed of 188 vignettes, ranging from a few lines to a few pages, the narrative playfully chronicles the narrator's "up-and-down roller coaster relationship" with the "unconventional" rabbi, telling of their trysts in a New Jersey love nest, and how the rabbi lost his congregation after turning up to a bar mitzvah naked. As more secrets are revealed and the narrator's obsession with the rabbi becomes all-consuming, a caper develops that hinges on the rabbi's deceased son, Rockland; his wastrel nephew, whose "latent sanity" the narrator hopes to unlock; and his doting maid—none of whom are exactly who they seem. The narrator's search for the truth leads him to a sect known as the Anti-Pontificators, a pair of brothers who make fetish jewelry, and the cemetery from which the ghosts of the rabbi's past cling to him. As the ribald and searching quest narrative progresses, the narrator longs to know his lover completely, and eventually despairs that "I may never find my synagogue." Perverse and perplexing, this novel is a scream.