Jews
spend a lot of time thinking about "what if?" What if you fall and
break your neck, God forbid? What if God had brought us out of Egypt but
never given us the temple, huh? What if every great American
immigration novel was set in Africa instead?
Johannesburg-born
writer Kenneth Bonert's debut novel, The Lion Seeker, borrows from
American Jewish masters of the novel to create a story of Jewish
immigration and assimilation that's uniquely South African. His hero,
Isaac Helger, together with his mother and sister, joins the family
patriarch in Joburg from Dusat, Lithuania, to grow up against a backdrop
of pre-WWII politics, changing technologies, and ugly race relations.
Recalling
in equal parts David Schearl from Henry Roth's classic and Augie March,
Isaac vows to be a success for the sake of his mother, who aches for
family left behind in Lithuania. Amid doomed business ventures and
girl-chasing, though, Isaac realizes that what he loves is fixing cars.
This pursuit becomes a metaphor for Isaac's exploration of his family's
troubled past. After all, he learns in this absorbing tale, it only
takes a second to smash something to bits, but lots of careful work to
make it new again.
- Leah Falk for Jewniverse
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