Children of the Ghetto: A Study of a Peculiar People portrays London's East End with a panoramic realism that moves from synagogues and sweatshops to markets and tenements. Through interlinked lives—especially Esther Ansell and the flamboyant poet Pinchas—it fuses social reportage with satire and pathos. Yiddish-inflected English and ethnographic detail give rare intimacy to scenes of ritual, charity, and labor, while probing friction between tradition and assimilation. Both slum narrative and communal chronicle, it opens the Victorian ghetto to outsiders without flattening its complexity. Zangwill, born in 1864 to Eastern European Jewish parents and raised in the East End, studied at and taught in the Jews' Free School. Firsthand familiarity with poverty, ritual, and communal politics—joined to his public advocacy in Anglo-Jewish and early Zionist debates—informs the novel's mixture of documentary candor and humane wit. Readers of Victorian literature, urban history, and Jewish studies will find this a foundational text—lucid, compassionate, and slyly comic. It rewards close reading for its linguistic music and ethical intelligence and speaks urgently to contemporary debates on migration, identity, and belonging. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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