From Library Journal
The narrator of Shapiro's (Playing with Fire, LJ 6/1/90; Fugitive Blue, LJ 12/92) third novel is Holocaust fugitive, psychotherapist loner Solomon Grossman, who by chance sees his adult son Daniel interviewed on television. This brings him to relate his sad story to Daniel, in absentia. Thirty years before, Solomon was accused of molesting his patient Katrina Volk, the daughter of a Nazi. Though undercurrents of anger, guilt, expiation, and seduction surround the incident?which Solomon was unable to explain?his wife left him, taking Daniel with her. Now Solomon jets to Los Angeles, where father and son reconcile just before Solomon dies of a heart attack. In death he becomes a sort of guardian angel, trying to help Daniel overcome his own checkered past. Shapiro interweaves personal and political history: tiny gold threads of possibility peek through, but no seams show. In the end, she achieves the difficult feat of producing a book that is appealing, kind, and compassionate without being maudlin. Recommended for fiction collections.?Harold Augenbraum, Mercantile Lib., New York
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Shapiro, author of
Fugitive Blue (1992), writes with great sensitivity about fractured familial relationships, but she skews her literary finesse with a peculiar heavy-handedness. In her third novel, she elevates improbability to mythic proportions as she executes a series of variations on the theme of wreckage. Thirty years ago, Solomon Grossman, an up-and-coming New York psychoanalyst and the only survivor of a Jewish German family that had perished in the Holocaust, wrecked his life with one outrageous act, a sexual liaison with a patient. When his revengeful seductress, the daughter of a Nazi official no less, went public, Solomon's life was destroyed and he lost all contact with his infant son, Daniel. Now 64 and still lonely, Solomon sees his son on television. There has been a terrible plane wreck, and Daniel is in charge of the investigation. Solomon rushes off to the scene of the crash, and in the midst of tragedy, he and his son meet as adults for the first and last time. Amazingly enough, Shapiro does transcend the schmaltziness of her plot to celebrate our ability to embrace even the most painful destiny with dignity.
Donna Seaman
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.