Goodbye, Columbus
Goodbye, Columbus is a novella by Philip Roth, first published in 1959 as the titular story in his debut collection of fiction, which includes five additional short stories depicting tensions within postwar American Jewish communities.[1][2] The narrative follows Neil Klugman, a young working-class Jew from Newark, as he pursues a fleeting summer romance with Brenda Patimkin, the athletic daughter of an affluent suburban family in Short Hills, New Jersey, exposing stark divides in socioeconomic status, cultural assimilation, and personal expectations.[1][2] Roth's incisive prose highlights the protagonists' mutual attractions and suspicions, intertwined with broader motifs of materialism, identity, and the erosion of traditional values amid upward mobility.[1][2] The collection garnered the National Book Award for Fiction in 1960, propelling Roth to prominence as a provocateur of American letters through his blend of humor, psychological depth, and unflattering realism.[1] While praised for capturing the complexities of Jewish American life post-World War II, it elicited backlash from some communal leaders who viewed its portrayals of familial dysfunction, sexual frankness, and suburban hypocrisy as damaging stereotypes that undermined ethnic solidarity.[1][3] This debut established Roth's signature approach: a commitment to dissecting human flaws without deference to collective pieties, influencing subsequent explorations of desire, power, and self-deception in his oeuvre.[1]