In Mr. Lublin's Store
In Mr. Lublin's Store is a novel by the Israeli author Shmuel Yosef Agnon. He describes the thoughts of a first-person narrator who arrived in Leipzig in 1915 about Judaism, his unnamed hometown in Galicia and his reception in Leipzig, while he is waiting for the return of his host Arno Lublin in his store in the city centre, located in a narrow alleyway named Böttchergäßchen.
The book was published in 1974 in Hebrew, in 1993 in German and in 2016 in English.
Outline
The book is divided into 8 consecutively numbered chapters with consecutively numbered sub-chapters. It has no plot but follows the stream of thoughts of the nameless first-person narrator, a young man from Galicia who last lived in Jaffa and came to Germany in the middle of World War I. He wants to write a thesis on clothing in Berlin. He soon gives that up and follows the attraction of a famous rabbi and Mr. Lublin's invitation to Leipzig.In the first chapter you get to know Lublin and its shop through the eyes of the newcomer. Lublin, away from home at the age of 11, has been in Leipzig since the 1870s.
The second chapter deals with obtaining the residence permit through Lublin's intercession with the official Dr. Paul Bötticher in the New Town Hall of Leipzig.
Lublin's store is located in a building complex bought by Lublin near Leipzig's marketplace called Böttcherhof. The houses are over 300 years old at this point. Contrary to the usual practice in Leipzig, the new owner does not tear them down and does not replace them with new buildings. He leaves 4 small shop owners in the shops inherited from their fathers, even if they have no sales and pay no rent.
In the third chapter, two of these small shopkeepers, Witzelrode and Götz Weigel and the history of their families are presented.
The fourth chapter is about Jakob Weinroot's shop and the history of his family.
Adam Isbas follows in the fifth chapter. His store is empty. Before the war he sold toys. Now he doesn't sell anything anymore, since only war toys are in demand, which Adam Isbas refuses. One of his customers was Frau Salzmann, a Jewish café owner whose young son had already died in the war.
In the sixth chapter, the first-person narrator catalogs Hebrew books in the very well stocked bookstore Haus für Orientalische Sprachen in Leipzig and, out of boredom, reads the goods catalog and the telephone book in Lublin's store.
In the seventh chapter, two very different young women are introduced, as well as the restaurant owner Glückstock and his story.
In the eighth chapter, leaping through time and space, Ya'akov Stern, a character from the first-person narrator's hometown, appears in Lublin's store. Instead of the usual cigar in his mouth, he has dust in his suit and is getting greyer and greyer.
Themes
Leipzig is referred to as a big city in Ashkenaz. The latter has been the name for Germany in Jewish literature since the Middle Ages. For the Eastern Jewish migrants from Galicia, Leipzig was an "arrival city" at that time. As is shown by the example of several families, one goes there to escape from misery and because there is already a relative who can take one in.Both the local color of Leipzig as a trade fair and trading city and the composition of Leipzig's Jews are described. There are said to have been three tendencies: the liberals, the orthodox and the people from Galicia, Poland, Lithuania and Romania. It runs through the book that the Jews supported Germany more unconditionally in the war than the non-Jews. This is what it says about the Salzmanns' son: "He went to war for love of his homeland, although he had not yet reached the age required for service in the army".
The author's critical attitude towards the war is made clear by the exaggerations of patriotism. The good reputation of the "Leipzig goods" also becomes an anachronism, because "now there are only substitute products". The old men are at a distance and already seem to live in another world. "I compared the shops to tombs and their owners to scrawny skeletons". At the end of chapter 7, the young first-person narrator, alone in Lublin's store, has a vision that walls are growing and that he will be transported to his hometown.