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Tikkun Olam Between Paper Covers
I confess. I enjoy mysteries.
They come in all shades and flavors. They keep you wondering, “What happens
next?” Some capture a place like Raymond Chandler’s L.A. Some are noir. Some are
comic. Some are cozy tales of meddling yentas.
In the end, mysteries are about truth, justice and just desserts.
Finding a good Jewish mystery – well, that’s just cream cheese and lox on the
bagel.
Here are some of my favorite Jewish mystery writers:
Batya Gur. When she died in 2005, the New York Times described her as “almost
single-handedly responsible for making the detective novel a flourishing genre
in Israeli letters.”
In The Saturday Morning Murder (1992), Murder on a Kibbutz (1994), A Literary
Murder (1993) and Murder Duet (1999), she focused on small worlds – a kibbutz, a
psychoanalytic society, a university department or the world of professional
musicians. In each case, a murder occurs where it’s unthinkable. Chief Supt.
Michael Ohayon is left to sort the facts and face the shadows. All of her
mysteries take place in Israel, often in Jerusalem.
Stuart Kaminsky. One of Kaminsky’s mystery series features Chicago cops Abe
Lieberman and his Irish partner Bill Hanrahan (aka the Rabbi and the Priest).
Lieberman is deeply Jewish. His wife Bess has served as president of their
neighborhood Conservative shul. His brother Maish runs a delicatessen.
In Lieberman’s Day (1994), Abe investigates the shooting that kills his nephew
and injures the nephew’s pregnant wife. Grieving himself, Lieberman responds to
the needs of his brother, sister-in-law, wife, daughter and grandchildren
throughout the day. He is also a policeman torn between finding his nephew’s
killer and ongoing investigations. Each chapter brings new complications to a
long, sad, difficult day. By the end, he has brought about a form of justice
worthy of Moses.
The Kellermans. First there was Faye, then there was Jonathon, and now there is
their son Jesse. Of the three, only Faye’s books focus on Jewish characters. Her
Rina Lazarus/Peter Decker mystery series now runs to 18 books. My favorite
remains the first, The Ritual Bath (1986) in which the Orthodox widow Rina meets
Detective Decker during a murder investigation. The latest is Blindman’s Bluff,
due out in August 2009.
Her book, Straight Into Darkness (2005) was inspired by her father’s stories
about his U.S. Army experiences as a translator for concentration camp
survivors. It is about one serial killer, in a Nazi society that made mass
killings public policy.
Rochelle Mayer Krich. Ms. Krich has two series, each featuring a Jewish woman
crime solver. Her first focuses on L.A. Homicide Detective Jessica Drake.
Through Fair Game (1993), Angel of Death (1994), Blood Money (1999), Dead Air
(2000) and Shadows of Sin (2001), the twin strands of Jessica’s cases and her
growing relationship with her newly discovered Jewish heritage are dealt with.
The second series, begun in 2002, features true crime writer Molly Blume. Molly
is Orthodox and unattached in Blues in the Night (2002). Through Dream House
(2003), Grave Endings (2004) and Now You See Me (due in October), she falls in
love with and marries a former high school flame, who has become a rabbi.
Daniel Silva. Silva is a former journalist who worked in the Middle East before
joining CNN as executive producer of its talk show unit. His series features
Gabriel Allon, an art restorer and sometime Israeli secret agent and assassin,
whose son was killed in a 1991 Vienna bombing that also wounded his first wife.
The first Gabriel Allon book was The Unlikely Spy (1997). The latest book, The
Defector, was due out in late July 2009. Silva’s books would be at home beside
John Le Carre.
Jeannette M. Hartman, 2009 |
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