The story begins with the role of a special Jewish student, Leo Finkle, who has finished his six year study. In the past six years Leo was ignored in his laboratory and ignored everything else. One of the things he denied was to show his future wife to an unreachable part by socializing his life. Pinye Salzman will do the search. Pinyin brings a portfolio containing six potential brides drawn from Magic Barrel.
At the beginning of Bernard Malamud, The Magic Barrel, beginning with children's book style, seems to be a fairy tale. But not so, each role plays a role. Love and discover who is the subject of the story, young Leo looking for love that does not exist. The prince married Cinderella, but Pero did not say that Prince and Cinderella were living happily ever after. Despite these differences, Perrault's Cinderella and Walt Disney's Cinderella have some similarities. Like Walt Disney, Perot shows many differences between Cinderella and modern women living in Western culture.
Bernard Malamud's 1954 short story "Magic Barrel" is one of the most famous literary works on matchmaking. With the New York Yiddish culture, Malamud knit a story about a mysterious stranger who promised to find a wife for a busy rabbi. It can be seen in the complete story of Malamud published by Farrar, Straus & Gireaux in 1997. Indeed, Wilder used two paragraphs. They adopted them directly from L'Avare of Molière translated into English as The Miser. Moliére: Two versions of Four Plays published by Branden Publishing Co. in 1999
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So what is the importance of the story "Magic Bucket"? Recall that Finkel wanted to find what she wanted in Salzman's "barrel", but he could not find it here. Instead, he found that the person he wants to marry in fact can not find in that bucket. This is the same person who led him to redemption. From this point it can be said that some "bucket" can not find the way of salvation, but as Finkel said, this is just "imaginary imagination". This simple redemption method is only "magic", it does not really exist. After all, the pursuit of reimbursement is full of pain and pain, and is supported only by the unwilling love of one person and the will of others.