A mesmerizing, heartbreaking graphic novel of immigrant life on New
York's Lower East Side at the turn of the twentieth century, as seen
through the eyes of twin sisters whose lives take radically and
tragically different paths.
For six-year-old Esther and Fanya, the teeming streets of New York's
Lower East Side circa 1910 are both a fascinating playground and a place
where life's lessons are learned quickly and often cruelly. In drawings
that capture both the tumult and the telling details of that street
life, Unterzakhn (Yiddish for "Underthings") tells the story of these
sisters: as wide-eyed little girls absorbing the sights and sounds of a
neighborhood of struggling immigrants; as teenagers taking their own
tentative steps into the wider world (Esther working for a woman who
runs both a burlesque theater and a whorehouse, Fanya for an
obstetrician who also performs illegal abortions); and, finally, as
adults battling for their own piece of the "golden land," where the
difference between just barely surviving and triumphantly succeeding
involves, for each of them, painful decisions that will have unavoidably
tragic repercussions.