Description
Paperback cover has some wear. The pages are clean and in good condition. The binding is secure.
This 1972 mass market paperback edition of “The Tenants” by Bernard Malamud offers a window into the acclaimed author’s later career and the turbulent social climate of 1970s America. Malamud, a literary titan known for his piercing explorations of moral conflict and the Jewish-American experience, crafts a tense narrative that mirrors the era’s urban decay, racial tensions, and ideological divides. The novel’s protagonists, a writer and a street-wise teenager, become embroiled in a harrowing battle for possession of a dilapidated Manhattan apartment building, laying bare themes of gentrification, displacement, and the quest for belonging. Though bearing the signs of its decades of existence, this well-preserved copy allows modern readers to immerse themselves in Malamud’s unflinching social commentary and his singular talent for rendering the depths of the human condition with empathy and nuance. A significant work from a master storyteller’s twilight years, this affordable edition holds enduring relevance for literature enthusiasts and those seeking insight into a pivotal juncture in 20th-century American life.