The World to Come

by Dara Horn
The World to Come  
published January 16th 2006 by W. W. Norton
binding Hardcover
isbn 0393051072   (isbn13: 9780393051070)
pages 320
description Following in the footsteps of her breakout debut In the Image, Dara Horn's second novel, The World to Come, is an intoxicating combinat...more
date added
06-22-07



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Yosafbridg
bookshelves: own-and-read
Read in May, 2007
With The World to Come Dara Horn has created a novel with the lyrical heart of a poem. Her words flow through the mind, through the soul, like a song, with repeated choruses and melodies that both soothe and haunt. Horn also uses her way with words to evoke a marvelous kind of synesthesia throughout the book which is extended even beyond my own imagination (and a wonderful paradise where exists, among other things, library/bars where

"librarian-sommeliers bring up the requested bottle carefully. Some are meant to be drunk warm heated with love; others are plunged into icy buckets of hatred or chilled slightly in anger before drinking. Most are served at room temperature, objectively tasted while some are served lust hot. Wary drinkers usually ask to see the label before opening he bottle, inspecting the title and the author's name to make sure it matches what they ordered.
Most of the visitors to the paradise bar drink cheap pints of newspapers and magazines, microbrewed advertising copy, and, lately, Internet screeds on tap. Some like fancy anthology cocktails, readers' digests of different works that make them seem more sophisticated than they are. Others prefer the hard stuff that needs no particular vintage, tossing back murder mystery shots and swilling down romances and thrillers that leave them plastered on the floor for days. . . .But others--are drawn to the bar, believing that behind the crowd swallowing cheap words, there might be something worthy of their not-yet lips. And those are the ones who meet the librarian-sommeliers."
...more
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Amos
04/02/07

Read in March, 2007
This was a delightful read spanning three generations in the lives of a Russian Jewish family. The book begins with the theft of a Chagall painting from a museum during a single's night cocktail hour. (Horn got this idea from the actual theft of a Chagall painting from the Jewish Museum in New York in June 2001. The painting was ultimately recovered a few months later in Topeka, Kansas.) In Horn's novel, Ben Ziskind, the man who stole the painting, did so because he believed that it belonged...more
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Kristen
bookshelves: fiction
Read in March, 2008
I can't believe I almost passed on this book. The first thirty or so pages didn't really connect with me, so I went over here and checked out the reviews. Easily, 90% of them were 4 or 5 starts. Okay. I continued.

And couldn't put the book down.

It focuses mainly on Ben, but also explores his family's history, be it in a Jewish orphanage in Moscow, to his father's experiences in Vietnam, and to his own twin sister, Sara. And it also focuses, briefly, upon the Russian artist Chagall and the...more
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Christia
Read in June, 2008
An absolutely exquisite, beautifully written book! I loved the Yiddish folklore included throughout the book (especially the story of the already born returning to heaven to prepare the not yet born for their lives) and the ideas of the not yet borns "eating" art and "drinking" literature in heaven in preparation for their future life on earth. The author tells the story of a Chagall painting and the impact it has on all the individuals within three generations of the family...more
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Ron
Ron rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/01/08

Read in May, 2008
Benjamin Ziskind is a former child prodigy who now spends his time writing questions for television quiz shows. When his twin sister Sara convinces him to attend a cocktail party at the Museum of Hebraic Art in New York, he sees there a painting by Marc Chagall which used to hang in their childhood home.

Convinced that the painting has been stolen from his family, Benjamin decides to "liberate" it from the museum. Following the theft we are told the history of the painting and those...more
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Irene
08/04/08

bookshelves: favorites, russian-jewish--or-both
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for: jeanie
Ahhhhh.

Have you ever met a person who you thought was odd, weird, just a bit off, and then, when you get to know this person--really get to know someone, you realize you found a true friend--someone that you feel like you've known for eternity? That was this book for me. I wasn't into it for the first third of the book, and then something special happened. I understood it. I understood every single last frustration of being born in the Soviet Union, escaping those Jewish-hating fascists ...more
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Hannah
01/15/08

Read in January, 2008
recommended to Hannah by: The cover is alluring!
recommends it for: people interested in family histories, tragedies, and spirituality
It took me a while to get through this book; I got lost along the way, enduring tragedy after loss after war after injustice. But like the Kite Runner, I do feel it's important to read narratives that bring to life the histories we only experience quantitatively otherwise. Dara Horn ultimately paints a picture of faith, something rare in "hot" fiction, and I ultimately was impressed with her bravery. Like Vonnegut's work, I expect this book may slightly tweak the way I see the unive...more
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laura
laura rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
03/13/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to laura by: Pendragon Bookstore
An engaging story with decent style. I really got into the intergenerational stories and the time-switching was only a little tricky to follow (it wasn't on the scale of Marquez, for example). The "pointy" aspects of the novel ("meaningful, thematic") were intriguing, and often moving, as death of close family members was a constant thread. However, I found myself mainly reading for the plot, which leads me to...

...the last segment, describing the World to Come where ...more
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Jennifer
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who is missing the dead this time of year
Wow! Last night I cried at the end of The House Theatre's production of The Nutcracker in Chicago* and this morning I cried as I read the end of The World to Come by Dara Horn. This book was complex, powerful, funny/sad and made me think about family members who are no longer here (but aren't truly gone) and the ones to come. So, what's the story about? It starts off simply enough--Daniel, newly divorced, goes to a singles cocktail hour at a local museum and ends up stealing...more
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Cjasper
bookshelves: my-books
Read in March, 2008
First, I have admit that I don't like too much magic or dream elements in books. I was expecting that in this book, and made it most of the way through being pleasantly surprised that most of the unreal bits were played off as altered states of consciousness. I liked the plots, I liked (didn't love) the characters, I liked the history and culture references, and I loved how the imagery throughout the book - ladders, bridges, slime, mud, flight. And then I got to the end, and felt so let down....more
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Alexandra
bookshelves: didn-t-want-to-end
recommends it for: seriously, I do not know who I haven't already recommended this to. If I missed you, now you know.
I love Jonathan Safran Foer. In passing I saw in a magazine that he liked "The World to Come" and I bought it the same day. Obsessive perhaps but it was brilliant.

Safran Foer, his wife Nicole Krause and Dara Horn all weave Judaism into their narratives and while I do not think this isolates these writers from the mainstream, I think it does give the Jewish 20-30-somethings who are of these writers' generation a sense of identity that is remarkable. Call it an added bonus like the ...more
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Joanne
Joanne rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/24/08

bookshelves: fiction
Read in July, 2008
This is an interesting mix of Yiddish folklore, Jewish mysticism, magical realism, and an art theft plus settings such as Stalinist Russia, the Vietnam war, New Jersey, and paradise. It's a story of a family over the generations, is poetically written and plot-gripping, and is worth picking up just for its description towards the end of paradise's bar, where books are bottled. E.g.:

"Most of the visitors to the paradise bar drink cheap pints of newspapers and magazines, microbrewed adv...more
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Ty
04/22/08

This is one of those books, if you're an aspiring writer, that either inspires you to take the plunge and give birth to that novel that's been lurking in your heart since you were fifteen or (to continue the swimming pool/underwater birth analogy) intimidates you back into the dressing room, forces you to put your street clothes back on, and makes you seriously think about giving up all creative endeavors to become an accountant. At a tire store.

This book amazed me. I borrowed it from a fri...more
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Elizabeth
bookshelves: 2008, novels
Read in February, 2008
There's a lot going on in this book, but mostly in a good way. Stories within in stories within stories... It's part mystery, with the theft of a Chagall painting being the catalyst for looks back into a family's history, Chagall's life, the life of Chagall's friend the Yiddish novelist Der Nister, Soviet Russia and the pogroms against Russian Jews, there's even a chapter that takes place in Vietnam.

I'm not explaining it very well, but let's just say that Horn weaves the subplots together n...more
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Julie
03/29/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to Julie by: Jenny
This was a dazzling book: beautiful writing, compelling characters, and a plot that pulls you in. It starts with an awkward singles cocktail party at the Jewish Museum and Ben Ziskind’s unlikely theft of a small Chagall painting. The narrative spins out forward and backwards in time from there, both detailing the consequences of his action and slowly filling in the pieces to explain how it became a family heirloom. Two generations in the past, Ben’s grandfather was the victim of violence...more
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Karen
Karen rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
04/20/08

Read in April, 2008
By the end of the first 50 pages or so, I was pretty excited about this book - I thought it was going to be a better " History of Love". Better because the texts that bring the characters together are so much richer than the pseudo-Borgesian book-within-a-book in "The History of Love". So I was very disappointed when I realized that the stories that connect the narrative threads in "The World to Come" were not ...more
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Dorothy
bookshelves: fiction
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: anyone interested in a good story
Dara Horn's tale of fraternal twins intertwines a wonderful story of family, art history, Russian and Jewish traditions. I found myself engaged with every chapter and Horn's fluid writing style makes it easy to follow the story against the more historical accounts.

As you travel back and forth in time, the transitions are done beautifully and never take away from main plot. Although the last chapter is on the cusp of mythology and for some it may even border a bit on anachronistic story telli...more
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Carrie
07/24/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in May, 2008
This book is very well-written, but long, complex, and philosophical (especially in the last chapter). It was a bit much for my taste.


"Let's say that every time the soul gets born into another life, it has another chance to make better choices," Sarah's mother was saying. "But then how can a person's life mean anything at all? How can the first chance matter, if you always get a second chance? How can anything you do in your life matter, if it's always just a rehearsal, just...more
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Julia
07/31/08

Read in July, 2008
recommended to Julia by: Jenny
What a great book. And to think it all begins with a singles cocktail party, in which recently divorced Ben discovers an old family Chagall painting on display and takes it back. Horn takes us on a engaging family journey, from the early days of Ben's grandfather Boris in a boys home in Russia to the days of his soon to be born nephew, awaiting the world to come. Throughout it all, the narrative is tied together by various Yiddish and family tales of love and loss, which add an interesting pe...more
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Becca
08/11/08

Read in August, 2008
This book is a fictional account of how a Chagall painting is connected to a Jewish family. I like how this book brings up certain questions about art like why art is so important - does it have to mean something in order to be "good" or can it just exist and still be considered good? Why does everything have to have a meaning behind it? And who deserves to see art/own it? I thought it was a pretty cool story but I kind of got sick of all the shit that the author wrote about what happe...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.92 (541 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.84 (25 ratings)
number of reviews: 147






other editions

The World to Come: A Novel (Paperback)
The World to Come (Fiction)
The World to Come (Hardcover)