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Refiner's Fire Kindle Edition
An Israeli soldier’s life flashes before his eyes in this epic tale: “As if The Odyssey had been updated and rewritten by Dylan Thomas” (The Listener, UK).
In 1947, Marshall Pearl is orphaned at birth aboard an immigrant ship off the coast of Palestine. Brought to America, he grows up a child of the Hudson Valley, determined to see the world in all its beauty and ferocity. His epic journey takes him from Jamaica to Harvard; from Great Plains slaughterhouses to the Mexican desert; and from the sea to the Alps. Marshall is eventually drawn to Israel to confront the circumstance of his birth in a crucible of war, magic, suffering, and grace.
We first meet Marshall among the mortally wounded Israeli soldiers who are being transferred to Haifa during the Yom Kippur War. From there we follow Marshall—along with his memories and dreams—as he reconstructs his life, galvanizing strength through all that he has learned, suffered, and hoped.
“Superb...A first-rate odyssey, full of insight and humor and hard-earned truths”—San Francisco ChronicleCustomers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
Refiner's Fire is the story of Marshall Pearl, orphaned at birth aboard an illegal immigrant ship off the coast of Palestine in 1947 and brought as an infant into the "ardent unlimitedness" of America. Determined to see the world in its beauty, ferocity, and ultimate justice, he does so, in scenes of gorgeous color and great excitement, as a child in the Hudson Valley, fighting Rastifarians in Jamaica, at Harvard, in a slaughterhouse on the Great Plains, in the Mexican desert, on the sea, and in the Alps. Finally he is drawn to Israel to confront the logic of his birth, in a crucible of war, magic, suffering, and grace. At the opening of the book, he is one of the dying wounded being transported to Haifa during the 1973 war. We follow him as he dreams, reconstructing his life, until, by the strength of what he has learned, suffered, and hoped, Marshall Pearl rises.
"Every once in a while a book appears that engulfs you in its limitless beauty. This is such a book. Helprin's use of language and imagery is an ineffable joy." - The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Refiner's Fire is an experience, like being shot out of a cannon - exhilarating, extravagant, vertiginous." - The Boston Globe
Educated at Harvard, Princeton, and Oxford, Mark Helprin served in the Israeli army, Israeli Air Force, and British Merchant Navy. He is the author of, among other titles, Refiner's Fire, Ellis Island and Other Stories, Winter's Tale, A Soldier of the Great War, Memoir from Antproof Case, The Pacific and Other Stories, and Freddy and Fredericka.
About the Author
Mark Helprin is the acclaimed author of Winter's Tale, A Soldier of the Great War, Freddy and Fredericka, The Pacific, Ellis Island, Memoir from Antproof Case, and numerous other works. His novels are read around the world, translated into over 20 languages.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
By darkness when he returned to Norfolk he had decided to join the Navy, which, after a year or so of arguments and heated wanderings in and out of the dance places at Virginia Beach, he did. At first he went to sea as almost a child, and the little experience he had he used badly, awkwardly, making more mistakes than he could count. But at nineteen he was an ensign in the Battle of the Atlantic. He used to come home every few months or weeks, and each time he was more solid, stronger, wiser. Being on the sea was miserable, especially in winter, and it wore him down. But it developed into his calling and during the war he had been off Africa, Normandy, and Japan. Because he learned fast and loved the sea he became a lieutenant-commander by the end of 1946, taking a year's leave of absence to rest and prepare: he intended upon a career in the Navy, but did not want to be entirely brought up in it. He thought that a year of peace-maybe some farming, a trip across the country to San Francisco, a month at home-would do it. His father had become prosperous, especially since the fleet had not been decimated and would not be dismantled as had been the custom after other wars. They lived in a big house and it was planned that the younger sister and brother would go to college.
Paul, though, was lost to the Navy; he was an officer with Southern ways and a fighting man's demeanor. They were proud of him, but having left early and against their wishes, he was not very much like them. He had forgotten his Jewishness, almost lost it in the rush and conviviality of war. No one knew he was a Jew if they didn't know his name. Even when he said his name, everyone did not immediately know his origins, since he pronounced Levy like the tax, or the embankment which holds back a river. He was by appearance and dialect a Virginia or North Carolina farmer-and this delighted him. He was free as his father had never been to blend into the country and be whatever he wished, except for his name and except for his regret, as he saw his father growing older, that he as first son would do little in continuing what began to appear to him in the quiet spring days of his extended leave, riding again in the Carolinas, as a very important line of passage, a crucial tradition.
It took him a day to go from the balm of the internal Carolina lakes and bays to Washington Square. New York seemed to him like rows of gray teeth and he could not understand how people chose to live inside files of concrete boxes in a city which was really not a city but a machine. To him it seemed about the same as building a great engine, a thousand times greater than the Corliss Engine, and then living inside. London too had gray teeth, but in circles and enflowered by trees and promenades. This city on the Hudson was like a shark's jaw-monotonous serrations thick and hard.
He had intended to seek out Jews, for the ones in Norfolk were in his eyes predictable and Virginianized. But to his great surprise, the Jews in New York would have nothing whatsoever to do with him. First, his approach was confused. He walked into restaurants and ordered familiar dishes. In this way he ate much and discovered that one does not retrieve receding history through gastronomy. He sat next to an old man and looked into his face, about to ask a momentous Jewish question, when the man said, "Go avay, cowboy." He explained that his name was Paul Levy, but when the old man heard the way he spoke, he fled. Paul kept on trying.
He chose a synagogue and went to pray, but when he entered they looked at him as if he were a raccoon or a possum who had wandered in from the Louisiana Bayou. He went to see a rabbi, whose advice consisted of coldly instructing him to purify his pots and pans by boiling water in them and dropping in a hot brick. "A hot brick?" asked Paul in disbelief. "Let me get this straight. You want me to boil water in my nonexistent pots and pans, and then drop in a hot brick? A hot brick! Rabbi, one of us is nuts, and it's not me."
After a week or more of seeking out Jews in New York he found himself at the house of a Roman Catholic law professor, lying on the floor of the library, which looked out on a cold Washington Square where snow was falling for the last time that spring, and next to the sooty buildings it telescoped itself into a salt-and-pepper image like the tweeds in the livingroom downstairs at the party. But the snow was twisting in cold whirlwinds like the warm viscous air above the fire. He was roundly, rotatingly drunk, davening in his drunkenness before the fire, and next to him was a Palestinian Jewess whom he had beguiled upstairs to kiss; but she wasn't drunk at all. She liked him though and had never heard a Jew who talked as he did. When he told her he was a Navy captain (he blushed at the lie) she leaned over on the Persian rug and kissed him on his mouth in such a wet sexual way and with such great affection that he said, "Would you believe that I'm really an admiral?"
"No, I don't believe you," she answered. "But I want you to tell me about that you are a captain."
And he did, starting with his revelation in Carolina about the Navy and the sea, his love for the sea, how in the war he had fought and endured, how his father had not known him but had seen instead a tough stranger who did pushups and could fight, and how for him being a Jew was impossible since he could not get either in or out and seemed to be hanging in between worlds which would not have him.
They stayed together for two weeks until she took him in a turtle-backed taxi to Idlewild and saw him off on his way to becoming a captain, as he had said he was. He felt that he did not know his own mind. He was apprehensive about not returning in time to resume his commission, apprehensive about leaving the silent city which he had come to like and respect, apprehensive about rising above shafts of sunlight and clouds on a straining airplane past the rows of gray buildings in new prosperity-a good quiet place for infants after the war-apprehensive of rising into an empyrean of blue, apprehensive of heading east, apprehensive of challenging the British cordon with an old coastal freighter, and apprehensive of the dreamlike frame of mind into which he had fallen. He hardly knew what had happened, but he felt as if he were certainly rising upward.
Copyright © 1977 by Mark Helprin
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
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Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,
6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.
Product details
- ASIN : B00APDB696
- Publisher : Mariner Books; First edition (June 5, 2012)
- Publication date : June 5, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 3.8 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 562 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #458,909 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #536 in Action & Adventure Literary Fiction
- #2,085 in Biographical Fiction (Books)
- #2,474 in Coming of Age Fiction (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Educated at Harvard, Princeton, and Oxford, MARK HELPRIN served in the Israeli army, Israeli Air Force, and British Merchant Navy. He is the author of, among other titles, A Dove of the East and Other Stories, Refiner's Fire, Winter's Tale, and A Soldier of the Great War. He lives in Virginia.
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Customers find this novel worth their time, praising its wonderful plot and vivid descriptions. The writing receives positive feedback, with one customer noting the author's true genius with language. They appreciate the character development, with one review highlighting the heart-aching development of character and plot.
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Customers find the book worth their time and consider it a great novel.
"Enjoyed reading this novel by Mark Helprin. Great plot and character development. Often very humorous and sympathetic human depictions...." Read more
"...This book is so rich with detail and experience that it will awe you...." Read more
"...Richard Powers is obviously a genius and a great writer. Don Dillio, John Irving, and especially Wallace Stegner are all great writers...." Read more
"...I recommend this book highly. Incredible, rich journey, true to Helprin form." Read more
Customers enjoy the storyline of this book, praising its wonderful plot, with one customer highlighting its rich journey and another noting its heartwarming nature.
"Enjoyed reading this novel by Mark Helprin. Great plot and character development. Often very humorous and sympathetic human depictions...." Read more
"...Helprin is so good at evoking emotion with wonderful plot and landscapes more beautiful than you thought could ever be described...." Read more
"...depictions of tragic events will make you wince, but it's always true to it's plot and not gratuitous. I recommend this book highly...." Read more
"...His stories never go stale and I regularly reread them." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual quality of the book, with reviews noting its picturesque prose, vivid descriptions, and rich detail.
"...The unique, inimitable style is literally breathtaking, in-spiring...." Read more
"...Helprin is so good at evoking emotion with wonderful plot and landscapes more beautiful than you thought could ever be described...." Read more
"Such a well-crafted story line, with vivid pictures that Helprin paints in such a clever way to bring this story to life...." Read more
"...One of my favorite authors .... I relish every colorful description and heart aching development of character and plot." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book, with one customer noting it as the best American writer of the 20th Century.
"...Richard Powers is obviously a genius and a great writer. Don Dillio, John Irving, and especially Wallace Stegner are all great writers...." Read more
"...I regularly read excerpts to my wife who also appreciates fine writing. His stories never go stale and I regularly reread them." Read more
"Mark Helprin is a very stimulating writer, and I only wish I had read "Refiner's Fire" BEFORE I read "Winter's Tale"...." Read more
"Mark Helprin is a great story teller & wordsmith who always crafts a very fine novel every time he writes...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with one review highlighting the heart-wrenching character and plot development, while another notes how well the author evokes emotion.
"Enjoyed reading this novel by Mark Helprin. Great plot and character development. Often very humorous and sympathetic human depictions...." Read more
"...Helprin is so good at evoking emotion with wonderful plot and landscapes more beautiful than you thought could ever be described...." Read more
"...I relish every colorful description and heart aching development of character and plot." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2025Enjoyed reading this novel by Mark Helprin. Great plot and character development. Often very humorous and sympathetic human depictions. Look forward to reading more.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2009Mark Helprin's "Refiner's Fire" is one of the most original fictional books I have ever read. Written in a whimsical, almost magical, style, the book begins with the main character, Marshall Pearl, ailing in a Haifa Hospital, gravely wounded from an artillery shell fired near Mount Hermon in the opening salvo of the Yom Kippur War. From there, the book tells the story of his life, from being born an orphan on a refugee ship in Palestine to fighting Rastas in Jamaica and searching for the story of his father amidst the frozen crevices of Mount Chamonix.
While adventuring through the world, Marshall goes through tests small and large, each of which will help make him into a man. Although the reader begins the book knowing that there will be some point at which Marshall goes through the refiner's fire, Helprin makes the story up to that moment both full and complex. Rather than just letting the big events do the shaping, Helprin shows how a person like Marshall, naturally brave and independent, can be tested in all sorts of ways, knowingly and unknowingly, and then draw upon the results of those tests for when it really counts.
The book demands the attention of the reader and, if it is given, the reader is rewarded with a lovely, intricate tale replete with beautiful language and thoughtful observations. For instance, while in the hills of the West Bank, Helprin observes that, "It was easy to die near Jerusalem, as easy as falling in the undertow of a history which surged in tides and currents and was unknown, but left its marks like wind eroding the rock. All things conspired there on a high part of the stage upon which they had come at their risk."
At the same time, however, although the majority of the book was involving, there were stretches in which the writing was a little too dream-like and detached, a bit distracting from the plot. Had the book contained fewer cluttered sentences and focused more on the difficulties and trials that cause "steel and gold and silver [to] spring from the previously soft souls of the tried," I believe it would have been an even stronger effort.
Still, the book is a great achievement and its sometimes-crowded and reaching sentences can be overlooked in a story of great beauty, told by a dazzling writer. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2025Having now read several of Mark Helprin's novels, I find myself awash in ambivalence, simultaneously uplifted yet strangely bereft; left with a mysterious image that the gap from me to God is even beyond that between me and a bacterium. He neither says nor implies anything of the sort, yet, that 's where I am left - such is the power of Helprin's ability to weave ordinary words into tapestries for the ages. I can name no other writer capable of such majestic and satisfying confections - maybe Shakespeare.
I suppose I could write the same review of all his books I have read, because the characters and settings all describe the central human longings - for the beauty to be found everywhere, for the love of our lives, and for our place in the cosmos. The unique, inimitable style is literally breathtaking, in-spiring. It demands much of the reader - close observation and frequent re-reading of sentences or passages to get their meaning - often at several levels of experience simultaneously - from mundane to eternal. The characters partake of everyman, yet at the same time depict Mankind's deepest longings and quest for humility and nobility.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2024This book started out well and continued until the middle portion when it devolved into fantasy which was so tiresome I actually quit reading ( something I’ve only done with a couple of books over a lifetime of reading). It’s as though the author dropped acid midway through the manuscript and started describing his trip. My review is for the reality based portions which were quite good but I found the fantasy exceedingly difficult to follow.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2013Any avid reader of Mark Helprin will tell you, he has one of the most gifted pens and imaginations of all time. This book is so rich with detail and experience that it will awe you. The story of Marshall Pearl's life is so vivid and adventurous that you feel totally enveloped. Helprin is so good at evoking emotion with wonderful plot and landscapes more beautiful than you thought could ever be described. Read this book and trust me, you will not forget it for the rest of your life.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2002This is one of the author's earlier works published first in 1977. Although not as good as Winter's Tale or Soldier..., it is still and excellent book. Helprin's magic with language and phrase is everywhere evident.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2001I started life reading all of the works of William Faulkner -- The best American writer of the 20th Century. Richard Powers is obviously a genius and a great writer. Don Dillio, John Irving, and especially Wallace Stegner are all great writers. But Mark Helprin is a true genius with language. After reading four of Mark Helprin's books, he comes closest to the magic writing of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, except I end up caring a gread deal more about his characters. "Winter's Tale" is remarkable. Just the language in "A Soldier of the Great War"; and "Memoir from Antproof Case" are worth reading. The brillance of the later works are evident in "Refiner's Fire".
- Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2017Such a well-crafted story line, with vivid pictures that Helprin paints in such a clever way to bring this story to life. I was disappointed when it was over. Such graphic depictions of tragic events will make you wince, but it's always true to it's plot and not gratuitous. I recommend this book highly. Incredible, rich journey, true to Helprin form.
Top reviews from other countries
- Neil WintonReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 27, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars Needs to have a couple of chapters dumped
Starts off well, but gets a bit boring during the endless sojourn in Israel towards the end. Do the stars have to be so unutterably beautiful?