The Rise of David Levinsky

audiobook

The Rise of David Levinsky

by Abraham Cahan

EN·~15 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total
1

Book I - Home and School Book II - Enter Satan Book III - I Lose My Mother Book IV - Matilda Book V - I Discover America Book VI - A Greenhorn No Longer Book VII - My Temple Book VIII - The Destruction of My Temple Book IX - Dora Book X - On the Road Book XI - Matrimony Book XII - Miss Tevkin Book XIII - At Her Father's House Book XIV - Episodes of a Lonely Life - BOOK I - HOME AND SCHOOL - CHAPTER I

3:16:18
2

BOOK VI - A GREENHORN NO LONGER - CHAPTER I

57:55
3

BOOK VII - MY TEMPLE - CHAPTER I

1:12:31
4

BOOK VIII - THE DESTRUCTION OF MY TEMPLE - CHAPTER I

53:53
5

GUSSIE

2:00
6

BOOK IX - DORA - CHAPTER I

1:14:15
7

CHAPTER IX

19:13
8

CHAPTER XII

1:10:17
9

BOOK X - ON THE ROAD - CHAPTER I

1:16:04
10

BOOK XI - MATRIMONY - CHAPTER I

1:32:16

Description

He recalls a childhood in a bleak Russian shtetl, orphaned of his father before age three and raised by a mother who survived by selling pea mush and odd jobs. Their cramped home, whispered prayers at the synagogue, and her tender, if spare, calls of “my little bean” forged his early sense of self. Even as a boy he wrapped his father's old coat around him like a quilt, dreaming of distant meanings in a world that felt both hostile and holy.

In 1885 he sails for America with only four cents, driven by a fierce urge to escape poverty. The garment trade becomes his arena, where relentless work and shrewd decisions lift him from penniless immigrant to a leading businessman. Yet even amid wealth, the shadows of his early years linger, prompting him to wonder if success can ever fill the emptiness left by his lost family and vanished home.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (919K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2001-09-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Abraham Cahan

Abraham Cahan

1860–1951

An immigrant journalist and novelist who helped shape the voice of Jewish New York, he wrote vividly about ambition, belonging, and the hard edges of American life. His work still stands out for how clearly it captures the hopes and tensions of the immigrant experience.

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