The Jewish Chronicle

From yule to shul

- The Matzah Ball By Jean Meltzer Reviewed by Mathilde Frot The Matzah Ball. Mathilde Frot is a JC reporter

Piatkus, £8.99

THERE’S A comforting glow to Jean Meltzer’s wholesome debut novel, The Matzah Ball, which features all the ingredient­s of a classic holiday romance but infused with Jewish flavours.

Rachel Rubenstein-Goldblatt struggles under the weight of her double-barrelled last name and prominent communal status as the daughter of a world-famous rabbi and macher and his fertility doctor wife. In secret from her family, she develops an almost pathologic­al obsession with Christmas, which leads her to convert her study into a room-of-shame, bursting with kitsch holiday ornaments and snowballs reflecting an undercover career as a bestsellin­g Christmas romance novelist.

When her publisher urges her to cast aside her nonJewish pen name to write about Chanukah — a minor holiday in religious terms, a rabbi later assures her — she is rattled. But the assignment forces her to rekindle her complex relationsh­ip with Judaism while convenient­ly also thrusting her together with Jacob, her love interest and childhood sweetheart turned summer camp nemesis, in this joyful Jewish romp.

Rachel’s chronic fatigue syndrome adds a more serious dimension to the book, as the protagonis­t learns to overcome the stigma surroundin­g her invisible illness in a storyline inspired by the author’s own experience of living with the condition. But, overall, the writing is sweet and familiar, like the Jewish baking its pages so often reference, and sits comfortabl­y ensconced at the light-hearted, feel-good end of the spectrum.

The stakes never feel particular­ly high. Of all the barriers to love, Christmasm­ania is perhaps not the most insurmount­able, and The Matzah Ball’s pages are replete with romcom tropes it does little to subvert, from the supportive gay best friend to the predictabl­e enemiesto-lovers plot structure. Its varying depictions of Jewishness run the gamut of religiosit­y from frum to secular and gives the story a benign sense of inclusivit­y. Quite a few readers may recognise themselves in the diverse cast of characters stretching from Jacob’s warm and wise bubbe to Shmuel Applebaum, a frum eventplann­er bursting with energy, in a plot full of cosy Jewish experience­s, from Chanukah candles that won’t fit, to an affinity for chow mein. To which can be added the warm and satisfying experience of reading the 376 pages of Meltzer’s

 ?? PHOTO: HARPERCOLL­INS PUBLISHERS ?? Jean Meltzer
PHOTO: HARPERCOLL­INS PUBLISHERS Jean Meltzer
 ?? ?? Readers may recognise themselves in the diverse cast
Readers may recognise themselves in the diverse cast

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom