Jesse Kellerman: Trouble (Putnam; $24.95) The author, son of writers Jonathan and Faye Kellerman, writes a novel about a New York medical student who believes he is saving a woman from becoming a murder victim. The woman's true identity looms as a source of fear as they play out a troubling romance. Robert Littel: Vicious Circle (Overlook Press; $24.95) In a novel of suspense and intrigue about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, former jour- nalist Littel features a female president of the U.S. who, with the support of the global community, brokers a major corn- promise between Israel and the Palestinian Authority in the hopes of snuffing out the spiral of violence. Elinor Lipman: My Latest Grievance (Houghton Mifflin; $24) The teenage daughter of two earthy and politico college professors meets up with her father's glam first wife, who gets a job on the campus where her parents teach. Keeping the connections secret brings comic havoc into the lives of the extended family. Joyce Carol Oates: The Gravedigger's Daughter (Ecco; $26.95) A family escapes Nazi Germany and settles in upstate New York, where the educated father can find work only as a cemetery caretaker. His daughter, born on the boat carrying the family to America, ultimately sculpts a life caring for her son. Alvin Rakoff: Patricia Schonstein: Baldwin Street A Quilt of Dreams (Bunim & Bannigan; $23) A Toronto neighborhood, filled with European Jewish immigrants during the 1930s, becomes the setting as a cop investigates the death of a young boy. The neighborhood presents a rough-and-tumble experience for a range of characters, includ- ing a budding writer. Jonathan Santlofer: Anatomy of Fear (Morrow; $24.95) A vicious murderer sketches his victims before killing them, and a police sketch art- ist is asked to draw the killer nobody has lived to describe. Drawings, mixed in with text, advance the suspenseful tale. (Knopf; 352 pp.; $25) N athan Englander's much- anticipated first novel begins and ends in darkness, in a wailed-off corner of a cemetery the Argentine Jewish community would like to forget. This is the burial ground of the Society of the Benevolent Self, once the synagogue of Jewish pimps, prostitutes and other underworld figures. The wealthy and respectable offspring of Jews with names like Hezzi Two-Blades and Henya the Mute prefer to wipe out traces of their less respectable back- ground, anxious that they have enough to worry about in the dangerous times of 1976, during Argentina's Dirty War. Kaddish Poznan, the son of a prosti- tute, is hired to sneak into the walled-off section of the cemetery after midnight and chisel away their names from the tombstones. As the prosperous daugh- ter of another prostitute explains to him, "Which man is better off — the one with- out a future or the one without a past?" The Ministry of Special Cases is a novel of ideas, a historical novel that at times feels like one of magical realism, but it's the story of a society gone awry, when surreal things can happen. The son of Kaddish and Lillian Poznan "is disappeared," a term understood to mean the government-sanctioned kid- napping of individuals, with no traces, Leslie Schnur: Late Night Talking (Atria; $22) The host of a radio show preaches propriety and realizes financial security for speaking her mind. Disarray enters her disciplined life with the arrival of her long-absent father, a former boyfriend and the new owner of the station. Fiction on page 40 effort with a nose job for him 1111 and his wife performed by a prestigious plastic surgeon, no answers about also the son of Benevolent their fate and no Self members. They get their accountability by Jewish noses erased, chiseled the authorities. off. Kaddish's surgery goes The novel is a well, altering his Jewish- departure in sub- looking profile to make him ject and tone from a handsome Argentine, but Englander's award- his wife opens her eyes to winning and best- the nightmare of a terrible 4 1 4.4 selling collection of job performed by a student, 4444—‘ stories For the Relief leaving her with a nose much .1ra ttt ittI41 I) oft it ■ of Unbearable Urges, worse than she began with. published in 1999 She then faces a larger night- when he was 29. In both, Jews figure mare when her son, Pato, is taken away prominently, but while the stories teased and vanishes. out differences between religious and Although her nose is fixed again to secular Jews, the novel is about, among make her look beautiful, she misses see- other things, community, identity, mem- ing the image of her son — who also had ory and fathers and sons. a prominent nose — when she looks in Kaddish is the name given to Poznan the mirror. Her pain is overwhelming. by a rabbi who refused to come into Lillian does everything she can to get Poznan's home (because of his mother's her son back, regularly visiting the cor- line of work) when he was summoned rupt offices of the Ministry of Special to give the sickly infant a blessing. Cases. She loses her job in an insurance The rabbi suggested that his name be office when she steals the private tele- changed to Kaddish to ward off the phone number of a general who was a Angel of Death. The name turns out to client and goes to see him. be both blessing and curse. The unnamed general denies the Throughout his life, Poznan is a man kidnappings and tells her, "Powerful as who's kept out, relegated to the outside. I am — I admit it — I can't undo what's For him, "It's a bully's heaven we have not been done. I can't make your son been given, a coercive place where all from nothing. You are Jews. Go to the the self-righteous can float around judg- river and mix him from clay. People from ing, voyeurs with wings." nothing is a Jewish affair." Plastic surgery plays into the story, Englander succeeds in creating a and Poznan is paid for one gravestone world that is darkly compelling. He THE MINISTRY OF SPECIAL CASES By Nathan Englander (William Morrow; $24.95) The lives of two strangers come together in South Africa at the time of political unrest against apartheid. The two resolve their personal problems as a nation enters a new direction. All 0141% writes bold and beautiful sentences, sometimes with humor embedded in his language and juxtapositions. Jewish expressions, teachings and aphorisms are woven into the way characters speak. "The story is both real and absurd," says Englander, 37, who visited Argentina in 1991, traveling there for the wedding of friends he'd met in Israel and then joining them on their honeymoon. He began the novel years later, working "off of these vague memories of place," he explains. He speaks no Spanish but since beginning the novel has mastered a lot of Argentine history. He returned to Argentina only when the novel was finished. "To lift up my head at the end of the book, to see how close it is to my heart, to see how much the Dirty War affected me, how I feel about those mothers," he reflects. Interestingly, the Society for the Benevolent Self has basis in history. As reported by Isabel Vincent in Bodies and Souls: The Tragic Plight of Three Jewish Women Forced Into Prostitution in the Americas, there was in fact a mutual-aid society in Argentina known as Chesed Shel Emet, Benevolent Society of Truth. The organization was established and maintained by Jewish women, mostly from the shtetls of Eastern Europe, who had been literally sold into slavery by Jewish criminal gangs from 1869 until the late 1930s. - Sandee Brawarsky iN June 28 a 2007 39