WE ARE OPEN MONDAYS CLOSED SUNDAYS his study, poring over obscure rabbinic texts, in search of a religious high. His wife, Miriam, a high- strung lawyer obsessed with household cleanliness, at first seems merely eccentric. Gradually, we see just how thor- oughly possessed she is by inner demons who command her to break into, enter and steal a bizarre array of objects from an equally bizarre array of strangers' houses. Alas, such narcissistically self- absorbed, socially challenged parents set the family stage for awkward, outcast offspring. Indeed, neither 16-year-old Aaron nor his 9-year old sister, Eliza, can claim a single friend or confidante. So agonizingly lonely are they that they cannot reach out even to each other. What they share is a longing for recognition — a sign of uncondi- tional love from their father, or, bar- ring that, a signal from God. In fact, religious ecstasy of one kind or another is the goal of each of Goldberg's characters. Miriam's com- pulsive kleptomania is driven by a pas- sion to "gather ... up the broken ves- sels to make things whole again." For his part, Saul yearns to solve the secrets of Kabbala — a quest that the earnest, love-eager Aaron pants to join him in. As for the unprepossessing, unreli- gious Eliza, her lack of any singular compulsion makes her, depending on one's point of view, either the ugly duckling — or the lucky one — in the family. Then Eliza wins her class spelling bee, aces the area and state champi- from talking to a friend who had her own fairly traumatic spelling bee expe- rience and reading an essay about spelling bees in Granta, a British liter- ary magazine. In 1997 Goldberg trav- eled to Washington, D.C., to observe the national spelling bee herself "I realized that part of my own fas- cination with the spelling bee lies in the fact that it is so easy to recognize ourselves in these kids. We have all felt the desire to please or to succeed against irrational odds. We have all felt what it is like to fail," says Goldberg. It was the universals of this human drama that powered her through the 18 months it took to create Bee Season. Mon. thru Sat 10 a.m.- 9 p.m. Fri. & Sat. (Carry-Out) 9 p.m.-11 p.m. Lincoln Shopping Center 10-1/2 Mile Road & Greenfield Oak Park ■ (248) 968-0022 Spellbound: "Bee Season" has received uniformly rave reviews. onships, and makes her way to the national finals. And whatever tenuous surface unity the Naumann family once possessed, now shatters com- pletely. In a chain reaction of events, Eliza's surprising string of victories propels her father to new heights of mystical hope; apparently, Eliza's mannerisms when concentrating at these contests duplicates exactly the state of medita- tive transcendence described by the 12-century Kabbalist Abraham Abulafia. With the fervency of a fanatic, Saul 30995 Orchard Lake Rd. Farmington Hills 48334 (248) 737-0110 to, `BEE SEASON' on page 88 Diane Cole is the author of the memoir `After Great Pain: A New Life Emerges" and is the book editor of the health magazine "In Touch." f.,v4A-uop4, Goldberg now lives in Brooklyn with her husband, Jason, and writes full time for a living. Our sister paper, the Atlanta Jewish Times, recently spoke with Goldberg about her novel. JT: Bee Season is a powerful and compelling book What kinds of feelings or experiences were you hop- ing to provoke in the reader? MG: Ideally, a book works on two levels. There is the purely escapist level in which a book transports its reader to a different world, and then there is the deeper level in which the' Barbie, Maureen, Deborah, Harold and Rebecca Jewish CONVERSATION on page 88 Visit our website at: www.jnsourcebook.com Unique Custom Designs Wedding Invitations • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs Party Invitations Full Service Accessories Calligraphy & Mailings Ask about our computer calligraphy. Instant invitations and addressing. Invitations 20% off. La Mirage Center 29555 Northwestern Highway Southfield, MI 48034 248-356-2454 8/18 2000 87