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  1. Goodbye, Columbus Summary. 23-year-old Neil Klugman lives with his Aunt Gladys and Uncle Max in a working class Jewish neighborhood in Newark, New Jersey in the late 1950s. One summer day, Neil is invited to the Green Lane Country Club in the suburb of Short Hills, New Jersey by his cousin Doris; there, he meets 21-year-old Brenda Patimkin.

  2. Goodbye, Columbus is a short story collection that explores life in Jewish communities primarily in and around Newark, New Jersey. There are six stories in the collection, with the longest being the titular “Goodbye, Columbus.”

  3. The story—originally published in The New Yorker on March 7, 1959 — deals with a Jewish American army sergeant who resists the attempted manipulation of a fellow Jew to exploit their mutual ethnicity to receive special favours.

    • Philip Roth
    • 1959
  4. Summary. Goodbye, Columbus is a novella written by Philip Roth and published under the same title in 1959 along with five short stories. The story is narrated by Neil Klugman, a middle-class Jewish library worker who meets Brenda, a young socialite from the affluent part of the city, while Neil is a guest at the local county club.

  5. Free summary and analysis of the events in Philip Roth's Goodbye, Columbus that won't make you snore. We promise.

  6. Study Guide. “Goodbye, Columbus” Chapter Summaries & Analyses. Chapter 1 Summary. At the Greenlane Country Club, Neil Klugman holds Brenda Patimkin’s glasses so that she can swim. He finds her beautiful, and later he asks his cousin Doris for her name and decides to call her.

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  8. Philip Roth's debut novella, Goodbye, Columbus, is a poignant and powerful exploration of love, social class, and identity in 1950s America. Published on January 1, 1959, the book won the National Book Award in 1960 and solidified Roth's reputation as one of the most talented writers of his generation.

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