Charged with the mystery of childhood, with curiosity and
daring, confusion and fear, the eleven interrelated stories in
"Useful Gifts" explore what Ruthie knows. The youngest child of
profoundly deaf parents living in Manhattan in the 1940s and 1950s,
Ruthie Zimmer speaks and signs. Interpreting for her parents, she
tries to make sense of worlds as close as her family's fourth-floor
apartment, as expansive as her rooftop playground and as diverse as
the neighborhood below.
The ways of language, its ways, its habits, its humor--as well
as the demons that rise within us when we fail to communicate--form
an undercurrent in many of Carole Glickfeld's stories. In "What My
Mother Knows" Hannah Zimmer gleans the neighborhood gossip from her
apartment window, telling Ruthie in a gesture that Mrs. Frangione
is pregnant again, and announcing in clipped, terse signs that the
O'Briens have divorced. "Know drunk?...Unhappy, fight, wife,
divorce." There is, in "My Father's Darling" the hoarse, choked
screaming of Albert Zimmer, "Honorfatherhonorfatherhonorfather"
striking his daughter Melva has she sinks to the floor muttering
"Misermisermisermiser" in the distant, disembodied voice of a
ventriloquist. And, in "Talking Mama-Losh'n" there is Sidney,
Ruthie's older brother, "getting down to business," sprinkling his
speech with Yiddish, French and German--words that project a wisdom
and cosmopolitanism he clearly craves.
Three floors below the Zimmer apartment, Ruthie enters the
altogether different realm of Dot, a thrice-married hatcheck girl,
and her daughter and son, Glory and Roy Rogers. These are
characters who, as their names seem to promise, bring adventure and
excitement--from acted-out fantasies of Hollywood to gunfights amid
the rooftop battlements of "Fort Arden," from impulsive, stylish
haircuts to Chinese food with pork. And, across the stoop, Ruthie
visits with the Opals family--Iris, Ivy, and Ione--three daughters
whose endless lessons in charm, elocution and posture prime them
for future "fame and glory."
In "Useful Gifts," Carole Glickfeld creates, through the
optimistic voice of a young girl, intimacy with the complexity and
heartbreak of a world we hope she can survive. In the closing story
of the collection, Ruth Zimmer, twenty years older, retraces her
neighborhood--not only to preserve her memories but to understand,
finally, their effect on her now, a grown woman living three
thousand miles away.
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