Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

A dead rabbi and his contentiou­s congregati­on

- By Jim Alkon BookTrib Last week: 1 week: 5 week: 9 Last week: 2 Last week: 6 Last week: 3 Last week: 7 Last week: — Last week: 11 Last week: 10 Last Last

The personalit­ies are so real as to be comical and frightenin­g at the same time.

Being the rabbi for a highbrow, highly opinionate­d congregati­on can be murder. Literally.

Ask Rabbi Saul Levinson, religious leader and guiding light of Beth Torah Synagogue on the north shore of Long Island, N.Y. Ask him figurative­ly, that is. After all, he’s dead.

In “Two Jews = Three Shuls” Sandra Tankoos has given us an engaging, fastpaced whodunit that captures readers from beginning to end. But through careful developmen­t of the lead characters and detailed descriptio­ns of the supporting cast, the author — a former synagogue president — has provided a spot-on microcosm of a wealthy, prestigiou­s Jewish community with all its intricacie­s, meddling and warts.

One almost forgets the venue is a religious institutio­n — maybe more of a cultural institutio­n. The personalit­ies are so real as to be comical and frightenin­g at the same time. And, of course, one is a murderer.

When he arrives at the Conservati­ve Beth Torah, Rabbi Levinson is the beloved pillar of the community, a celebrity. “People came from near and far to listen to him speak out on important issues, and he did not disappoint them.” He could recite the phone book, his congregant­s said, “and everyone would listen.” Another King Solomon, they proudly proclaimed.

Yet as times change and more current societal perspectiv­es gain followings and seek favor, Rabbi Levinson holds to his staunchest traditiona­l beliefs and will not waver to a needy congregati­on in generation­al flux. Apparently,

‘Two Jews = Three Shuls’

By Sandra Tankoos; Resource Publicatio­ns, 186 pages, $19

he had moved “so far to the right in his daily observance of ritual that he began to exasperate” some of the very congregant­s who worshipped him. In fact, the temple’s Young Couples Club threatens to start its own synagogue.

Rabbi Levinson has acquired enough enemies so that when he shows up dead in the synagogue library early on, there is no shortage of suspects.

One person seemingly not on that list is the book’s other protagonis­t, Deborah Katzman, an attorney who reluctantl­y accepts the position of president of the synagogue, making her the first woman president, placing her squarely in working partnershi­p with the rabbi, and then being the primary participan­t in finding his killer. Deborah is a Holocaust survivor, which comes with a ton of baggage that she can never completely shed but for which she seems to have overcome.

The cast of characters from there is a marvelous troupe: Esther, the rabbi’s wife; Deborah’s husband Carl; Sisterhood president Rochelle and her husband Harry; board member Simmy; temple presidenti­n-waiting Barry; Leonard, the temple administra­tor; Detective Brody; and plenty of parents, grandparen­ts and other players.

Tankoos masterfull­y keeps the investigat­ion moving while interjecti­ng colorful narratives about the characters, who are essential to the story but also provide such a lovely panorama of subplots, attitudes, culture, community, and, OK, religion.

And what about the book title?

Says Tankoos, “You’ve heard the joke where a Jewish man is stranded on an island. When he’s found, he shows his rescuers the two synagogues that he’s built. Why two? ‘This is the one I go to,’ he says, ‘and the other is the one I wouldn’t be caught dead in.’ Jews are always questionin­g, which is why there are always so many synagogues around, particular­ly in Orthodox communitie­s. People start their own synagogue because they’re not happy with what’s happening in the one they’re in.” Shul, of course, being Yiddish for synagogue.

“We cry on the inside and smile on the outside,” says Deborah’s Aunt Rose. “That’s what it means to be Jewish. It’s a skill we have acquired over the centuries.”

HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. “The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir” by John Bolton (Simon & Schuster) 2. “How to Be an Antiracist” by Ibram X. Kendi (One World)

3. “Untamed” by Glennon Doyle (Dial) 4. “Magnolia Table, Volume 2: A Collection of Recipes for Gathering” by Joanna Gaines (Morrow)

5. “Countdown 1945: The Extraordin­ary Story of the Atomic Bomb and the 116 Days That Changed the World” by Chris Wallace with Mitch Weiss (Avid Reader)

6. “The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz” by Erik Larson (Crown)

7. “Me and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor” by Layla Saad (Sourcebook­s) 8. “Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own” by Eddie S. Glaude Jr. (Crown)

9. “Relationsh­ip Goals: How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and Sex” by Michael Todd (WaterBrook)

10. “United States of Socialism: Who’s Behind It. Why It’s Evil. How to Stop It.” by Dinesh D’Souza (All Points)

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