Kaufman’s story centers upon Sylvia Barrett, a first-year teacher at a massive public high school named after Calvin Coolidge. She ultimately spent about thirty years in New York’s public schools, and those experiences deeply informed “Up the Down Staircase.” And, like so many Jewish women of her era, she then became a teacher herself. There is no small amount of autobiography in “Up the Down Staircase.” Kaufman was the granddaughter of the renowned Yiddish author Sholem Aleichem, whose Tevye stories inspired “Fiddler on the Roof.” She came to America as a twelve-year-old immigrant from Russia, and, like many Jewish immigrants, she used public school as a ladder of upward mobility and Americanization. What place can there be for a book about the large struggles and little glories of a teacher, at a time when teacher bashing has become a major strain, even the dominant strain, of what passes for “education reform”? Unconvinced, I checked several online booksellers, and, sure enough, no current print edition was available.* I grabbed a copy from the library, and as I plunged into it I realized just how sadly appropriate it was that the book had fallen into obsolescence. Instead, very much to my surprise, the Barnes & Noble clerk informed me that “Up the Down Staircase” was out of print.
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