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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 04/2023
  • 9780646873879
  • 274 pages
  • $15.95
Ebook Details
  • 04/2023
  • BOC2XL4FG1
  • 274 pages
  • $9.99
Hardcover Details
  • 04/2023
  • 9780646876115
  • 274 pages
  • $21.95
Levinson of Harvard
L.M. Vincent, author
At the turn of the 20th century, a young Jewish immigrant living in the North End of Boston yearns to be a college man, no matter the cost. Five decades later his grandson embarks on his own college education and comes face-to-face with the unexpected secrets of his long-dead grandfather. Through dual narratives across time, LEVINSON OF HARVARD traces the parallel stories of grandfather and grandson, as each grapples with misguided aspirations, antisemitism, the loss of innocence, and the weight of family legacy.
Reviews
Vincent (Reception) explores the allure of Harvard for three generations of a Jewish family in this appealing tale. In 1969, Kansas high school student Mark Levinson gets accepted to the Ivy League school. Once he arrives that fall, however, he immediately feels out of his depth. Even worse, there’s no record of his grandfather Moishe having attended the university, despite Moishe’s many stories of his Harvard years. Using a letter and some other artifacts from back home, Mark attempts to uncover the real story with the help of an archivist. Amid his search, flashbacks to the first decade of the 20th century reveal the truth about Moishe. While living with his aunt and uncle in Boston, he yearns to attend Harvard despite warnings about harsh antisemitism from his cousin, a student there. At a summer resort job in 1904, Moishe begins a relationship with an Irish actress who provides accent and etiquette training to help him blend in with the upper crust, thus setting the stage for his plan to become an interloper at Harvard. Though Mark’s story doesn’t develop enough for the amount of pages devoted to it, the revelations about Moishe’s scheme are remarkable, and Vincent provides a bracing depiction of early-20th-century antisemitism. This meaty campus novel has a satisfying mystery at its core. (Self-published)
@MomentMagazine

". . . a fascinating mystery about Jewish identity and meditation on belonging in America."

Dick Friedman, Contributing Editor, "HARVARD MAGAZINE"

"With history and heart, L.M. Vincent takes an ingenious premise and creates a rollicking page-turner of two generations of nice Jewish boys attempting to penetrate Harvard's forbidden (to them) sanctums."

Kirkus Reviews

". . . a stylish and surprisingly gripping family drama. . . A compulsively readable university tale of identity and acceptance."

Moment Magazine

“. . . a thought-provoking fable about identity and assimilation—and a look back at the American class system at its most rigid and unforgiving . . . This one will leave you thinking about things past, and passing, and to come.” 

 

Publishers Weekly

". . . Vincent provides a bracing depiction of early-20th-century antisemitism.  This meaty campus novel has a satisfying mystery at its core."

The Booklife Prize

"...readers will be mesmerized by the unfolding mystery alongside polished characters and rich parallel storylines."

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 04/2023
  • 9780646873879
  • 274 pages
  • $15.95
Ebook Details
  • 04/2023
  • BOC2XL4FG1
  • 274 pages
  • $9.99
Hardcover Details
  • 04/2023
  • 9780646876115
  • 274 pages
  • $21.95
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