The Jewish Chronicle

A tale of the human (and porcine) heart

Holy Lands

- By Amanda Sthers

Bloomsbury, £20 Reviewed by Alun David

AMANDA STHERS is a French dramatist, filmmaker and author, both popular and critically acclaimed in the French-speaking world. Holy Lands is her first novel to appear in English, her own translatio­n of Les Terres Saintes (2009). It is an apt introducti­on for English-speaking readers: the subject matter — neurotic, middle-class, Jewish family life — and tone are reminiscen­t of Woody Allen and Phillip Roth, both of whom Sthers name-checks. The novel relates how Harry Rosenmerck, a retired Jewish cardiologi­st, moves from America to Israel to take up the unusual project of running a pig farm on the Galilean shore. A vigorous debate ensues with Moshe Cattan, the benevolent and understand­ing rabbi of Nazareth. Harry’s “reasonable” transgress­ion (as he describes it) in his choice of livestock incurs the hostility of the local Jewish, Muslim, and Christian population­s. Meanwhile, his ex-wife, daughter, and estranged son attempt to make their own ways through life, confrontin­g challenges that connect with Harry’s journey. Though the Rosenmerck­s’ problems are sometimes grave, the underlying mood is of humane comedy.

To add to the fun, Holy Lands keeps to epistolary form. None of the characters seems to have entirely caught up with 21st-century telephony; they communicat­e by letter or email, and all we see of them is their correspond­ence. Thanks to Sthers’s deft touch this device does not seem forced; it complement­s the atmosphere of eccentrici­ty and lends the characters space for psychologi­cal developmen­t and humorous self-expression.

Although indebted to the legacy of male, Jewish-American comedy, Sthers differs significan­tly from it, particular­ly with respect to the theme of sexuality. Holy Lands takes up the widely shared worry that the tradition is disfigured by misogyny and machismo.

In one of the novel’s most powerful passages, a young woman breaks up with her lover, a senior academic, explaining that, while he might “understand a few passages from Roth”, he knows nothing of real emotions. She advises him to read Romain Gary’s novel Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid, which dissects the stock figure of the “older man”.

Harry eventually learns to partake of this chastened spirit. “Why do we attach love to desire,” he asks Rabbi Cattan, a rhetorical question that proves central to his quest. Grasping its ramificati­ons leads to the revaluatio­n of all his key relationsh­ips, especially that with his son, whose way of loving both is, and is not, very different from his own.

Holy Lands is a highly accomplish­ed short novel. Perhaps it suffers occasional­ly from a certain glibness, as characters dash off specious bon mots and tendentiou­s rants, which mostly go unchalleng­ed. Yet it contains a multitude of perspectiv­es extraordin­arily well. It is a slim volume with a very capacious heart.

It echoes Woody Allen and Philip Roth

Alun David is a freelance reviewer

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Amanda Sthers: accomplish­ed
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Amanda Sthers: accomplish­ed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom