As a writer and political activist in early-twentieth-century America,
Michael Gold was an important presence on the American cultural scene
for more than three decades. Beginning in the 1920s his was a powerful
journalistic voice for social change and human rights, and Jews Without
Money -- the author's only novel -- is a passionate record of the
times. First published in 1930, this fictionalized autobiography offered
an unusually candid look at the thieves, gangsters, and ordinary
citizens who struggled against brutal odds in lower East Side Manhattan.
Like Henry Roth's Call It Sleep and Abraham Cahan's The Rise and Fall
of David Levinsky, Jews Without Money is a literary landmark of the
Jewish experience.
Michael Gold (1893-1967) was born in New York City, where later he wrote
for radical journals and newspapers such as New Masses and The
Liberator. Jews Without Money has been translated in more than
fourteen countries, including Germany, where the novel was employed
against Nazi propaganda.