Patty Friedmann Novel Is A First Rate Story JOSEPH COHEN Special to The Jewish News p atty Friedmann's The Exact Image of (Viking, Mother $18.95) is the exact image of a first-rate first novel. It is superbly well written, witty, sad, funny, poignant, flip, serious, and, most of all, ac- complished beyond what one normally expects in an in- augural narrative effort. It rings with the authenticity of real experience closely lived and closely observed. Why is it so good? it is For openers, astonishingly deceptive in the sense that the story runs as if it were on cruise-control, smoothly pacing itself, never breaking down like the pro- tagonist's erratic Karmann Ghia. It sails on by without asking the reader to assume any responsibility. All one L I) has to do is to sit back and en- joy the ride. The sheer enter- tainment factor is high. The book has style and class and plenty of both. Yet underneath this highly sophisticated narrative ex- pressway there exists a whole series of emotional subterra- nean tunnels, each with its own painful entrances and ex- its, on-going problems and special torments. That's where the deception comes in: you may think you can just go along for the ride but you -, can't. You have to get involved. The emotional subterra- nean tunnels are ones which involve us on various levels, Jewish, male and female, parental, familial, human. The book opens with the spec- tre of unresolved feelings about the Holocaust and it ends with another spectre, the tidying up that follows one death by AIDS and another by Alzheimer's disease. In between, issues are raised and explored, and are sometimes resolved and sometimes not. These include Jewish and Catholic identity, adolescent rebellion and its extensions into adulthood, mother-daughter conflict, single motherhood, Jewish- black interaction, New Orleans decadence, escape and return, loss, and regeneration in a time of shif- ting values, recklessness and Joseph Cohen is emeritus professor of English at Tulane University and founding director of its Jewish Studies Program. exploitable relationships. Selfishness and greed splatter rich and poor alike, compoun- ding everybody's misery. The central conflict is the prolonged identity crisis of the protagonist, Darby Cooper. She is the daughter of a union of two German Jews. Her father escapes from Ger- many and the Holocaust just in time. He is lucky enough to leave on one of the last boats from Le Havre before World War II erupts. Nameless, he is little more than a useless abstraction. Letty, Darby's mother, is a fourth generation American, rich and spoiled, an uptown Jewish bluestock- ing phony aristocrat, who when we first see her is traveling in France with Dar- by's grandmother (a genuine aristocrat, Chicago born and reared, disenchanted with the artificiality of life in New Orleans), both of them so preoccupied with their shop- ping that they are totally oblivious to the monumental tragedies unfolding on the eve of the war. On their voyage home, they are also passen- gers on the ship from Le Havre. Darby's parents marry after a shipboard romance. The marriage is foredoom- ed because the couple has lit- tle in common: Letty is domi- nant and insensitive, Darby's father is ineffectual and oversensitive. Letty plays the wealthy uptown bitchy matron; nameless daddy is merely the manager of the fancy grocery patronized by her well-to-do neighbors. In time, he commits suicide, vic- timized by his in-laws' ar- rogance, his own powerlessness, and the guilt it generates over their com- plicity in leaving his mother in Germany to be exter- minated by the Nazis in Theresienstadt. Talk about a skeleton in a closet; this is one that keeps on growing. As Darby enters adolescence, she rejects both parents. Her rebelliousness never ebbs; it moves straightforward into adulthood. She purposely takes and tenuously holds on- to a low-paying job as a librarian. Really good novels about Jewish life in the American South are as rare as koshered rabbits. Jewish tales just haven't come out of the land of cotton. This one is now out of its warren, and it's a honey of a kosher bunny, a real cot- ton tale. ❑ Copyright 1991 Joseph Cohen Try-Outs for Competition Teams and Auditions for Scholarships To be Sponsored in September • Special Scholarships for Male Dancers • Suspended Hardwood Floors pst$0 cx . 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