Rafi Zabor

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Rafi Zabor


Born
in Brooklyn, New York, The United States
August 22, 1946

Genre


Rafi Zabor (born Joel Zaborovsky, August 22, 1946) is a Brooklyn, New York–based music journalist - and musician-turned-novelist.
Rafi Zabor was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He has worked and recorded as a jazz drummer and written about music for Musician, Playboy, and the Village Voice, and about dervishes in Istanbul for Harper's. His novel, The Bear Comes Home, won the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1998 and was voted one of the Los Angeles Times's Best Books of the Year. He still lives in Brooklyn, where he is finishing the second volume of I, Wabenzi.
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Average rating: 3.82 · 683 ratings · 94 reviews · 6 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Bear Comes Home

3.84 avg rating — 636 ratings — published 1997 — 15 editions
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I, Wabenzi

3.50 avg rating — 42 ratings — published 2005 — 7 editions
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Street Legal

4.67 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2014 — 3 editions
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Aging (Tricycle Teachings #4)

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3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2012
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The Bear Comes Home.

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The Bear Comes Home [First ...

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More books by Rafi Zabor…
Quotes by Rafi Zabor  (?)
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“In the meantime, the Bear had attained the Avenue, where blinding, brilliant traffic travelled like a line of light from north to south, as if between worlds. But it was Jacob who saw the ladder, wrestled with the angel, and obtained a birthright under false pretenses. The Bear had done none of these things. He pulled the hat brim farther down on his face and walked south beneath the vault of darkness, above him like guardians or heralds the electric signs of bars and stores- white, orange, yellow, gold, red, brilliant blue and green, occasional imperial purple - as if they were angels that had descended to earth only to hire themselves out as lures for business, possibly for reasons of pity. The Bear walked beneath them like a resolute and powerful man, the saxophone case at his side swinging like a cache of fate, love, gold or vengeance. When he realised that he could have his pick of them - that all options, attributions and possibilities actually were open to him, that he was, at the moment, exalted, liberated, free - he stopped walking for a moment, put down the saxophone case, looked gradually around him at the Avenue, raised his snout and smiled broadly, and there on the pavement stretched out his great and inevitable arms. Aah. The night entered him like honey, and he began so heartily and with such depth of pleasure that it might have been for the first time in his life, to laugh out loud.”
Rafi Zabor

“But just look at her, he thought. How can there be this much treasure all in one place, and the world still here?”
Rafi Zabor

“Ambitions are like assholes, and they smell like flowers to the owner. I must be delusional. Give it up.”
Rafi Zabor

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