arts & entertainment A Gilded Cage "The Matchmakersounds like a throwback to an earlier, more traditional style of Israeli film- making but it instead provides a view of that country that's satisfyingly eccentric." -Kenneth Turan, LA Times e gets you what you need... not what you went afChMake AVI IfS October 19-20-21 October 26-27-28 www.dia.orgicift 313•833.3237 56 October 11 • 2012 The Jews of North London face the constrictions of Edith Wharton's New York. Rachel Shukert Tablet Magazine I is one of the professional hazards of writing for a Jewish magazine that you begin to reflexively excavate Jewish subtext in popular culture where probably (and preferably) none was intended. In this realm of thought, Downton Abbey becomes a toff (upper-class) re- imagining of Fiddler on the Roof True Blood a cautionary tale on the trials of assimilation (or anti-Semitic blood libel, take your pick) and the Harry Potter saga an elaborate magical allegory for the Holocaust (although did she really have to make the inhuman goblins hook-nosed and bankers?). So many Jews, lurking around every corner, casting their shadow over every aspect of society and culture, no mat- ter how unrelated! One almost starts to understand how the anti-Semites feel. Mel Gibson, c'est moi. Its a relief, then, to come across some- thing like Francesca Segal's skillfully rendered and delightful debut novel, The Innocents (Voice), which subverts the paradigm by putting the inferable Yiddishkeit of an iconic work front and center. In her Hebraized — and cleverly literal — retelling of The Age of Innocence, Segal substitutes Edith Wharton's Gilded-Age Manhattan upper crust for the tightly knit Jewish community of north London suburb Temple Fortune (disclosure: My husband was born, if not raised, in pre- cisely such environs). The primly vacillating Newland Archer is converted into Adam Newman, a 30-ish lawyer and professional Nice Jewish Boy beginning to feel hemmed in by all the Shabbat dinners and mandatory chauffeuring of old ladies and unimagi- native sexual positions and wondering if there might be some sort of wonderful wonders awaiting him in the glamorous world of gentiles. Newland's intended, the innocent May Welland, becomes Rachel Gilbert, Adam's recent fiancee and girlfriend since high school (they met on a teen tour of Israel and were instantly smitten; readers — not to mention Rachel's parents — may be forgiven for asking what took them so long); Ellen Olenska, the wounded tempt- ress who entices Newland to stray from the well-traveled path of propriety, finds Raised in London and America, Francesca Segal, author of the new her counterpart in Rachel's cousin Ellie novel The Innocents, is the daughter Schneider, a 6-foot-tall, 22-year-old of the late novelist Erich Segal (Love blond Jewish supermodel. If that last Story). one strikes you as a little, shall we say, then congratulations! You're as unlikely, self-hating as I am. At first glance, the parallels Segal draws (and schmeckl; in books like these they are so often the same thing) and leave are remarkably, even ingeniously, cun- poor Rachel for Ellie, who is sexy and ning. unpredictable and effortlessly thin, what The close, nearly incestuous bonds of will really happen? the community she describes, with its True, he might have to leave his cushy endless and inescapable litanies of mar- job at his father-in-law's law firm; but he's riages and deaths and who is related to a qualified attorney! Surely he could find whom and who flunked out of medical another job. The yentas would have plen- school and who is getting a divorce and ty to discuss. His mother would certainly why and when will she be ready to date be pretty pissed off, but she's not going to again and where's the shivah, uncannily stop speaking forever to her only son. mirrors Wharton's insularity (not to men- Adam, ever logistical even in his deep- tion my own; an early description of the est flights of fantasy, acknowledges this to congregation standing in silent judgment himself. A Jewish son of Adam's caliber is of one another during a Friday night ser- vice made me close the book for few min- too valuable an asset to be allowed to fade from the fold. The "Community," however utes of quiet, hyperventilating panic). rattled, would forgive, if not forget. The Jews of North London, it seems, Who would not forgive (apart, of occupy a biosphere all their own. course, from Rachel) is Adam himself. To Outsiders who wander into their midst give in to his desires would forever taint — a convert upon marriage; a univer- his image of himself as a dutiful Jewish sity friend of Adam's who happens to be son, a good person, a mentsh — more Jewish on the wrong half — are either than his love for his wife, or any love for quickly subsumed or sentenced to suf- his community (although Segal pays deft fer a kind of shadow membership in the and touching tribute to his love affair club, i.e., they can eat at the snack bar but with his own image, his own goodness). can't use the pool. This sense of rectitude, explicit in The Given the pointed sense of place and and implicit here, is the Age of Innocence loving wealth of detail Segal supplies, I dark side of self-segregation, if not its have no doubt that she is as intimately root. Other people might do whatever familiar with her setting as Wharton was with hers. But this raises a question: Why, they want, but not us, because we know better, and therefore are better, than any- exactly, are these people so isolated? Or one else. rather, perhaps more pertinently, why Innocents, indeed. have they chosen to isolate themselves? In The Age of Innocence, the answer Rachel Shukert, a Tablet Magazine columnist is clear: Wharton's characters occupy on pop culture, is the author of the memoirs the very pinnacle of 19th-century New Have You No Shame? and Everything Is Going York society. Should they break any of to Be Great. the unspoken (and spoken) strictures regulating such a rarified stratum, there's nowhere to go but down. During the Jewish Community And as Lily Barth in Wharton's The Center's annual Jewish Book Fair, House of Mirth illustrates, down means running Nov. 7-18, Francesca Segal all the way down — broke, friendless, will appear as part of Lunch with coughing-up-blood-on-the-filthy-sheets- the Authors, with fellow novelists of-the-boardinghouse-you're-about-to- Wedding Beat) Devan Sipher (The be-evicted-from down. (Say Nice Things and Scott Lasser In 21st-century London, where every- at noon Thursday, About Detroit), body, even most of the royal family, gets Nov. 15, at the Jewish Community to do pretty much whatever they want, Center in West Bloomfield. www. the stakes are necessarily quite a bit . jccdet.org lower. If Adam chooses to follow his heart ❑