arts & entertainment A Couple Of Greenhorns, Magical Realism Style First-time novelist Helene Wecker's The Golem and the Jinni is making the rounds as one of the must-read books of the summer. Diane Cole Special to the Jewish News R eading Helene Wecker's debut novel, The Golem and the Jinni (Harper), is akin to embarking on a magic-carpet journey in time to a place that resembles the roiling ethnic neighborhoods of Lower Manhattan circa 1900. Here, newly arrived Eastern European Jews and Syrian Arab immigrants inhabit their own adjacent but separate enclaves and practice their different religions, all the while remaining mostly indifferent to one another, and almost entirely invisible to the rich folk who rarely venture south of their splendid uptown mansions. But look more closely at the historically accurate street settings and tenements, and you'll find you're actually visiting a multi-cultural fairy tale, replete with the mystical folklore and supernatural beings man about to leave Eastern Europe for born of diverse traditions. America. When her master dies suddenly This is a realm in as their ship is crossing which the Jewish Golem the Atlantic, the young (a super-humanly strong "widow" is left at the New human-like creature cre- York docks to find her ated from mud by kab- own way in a perplexing balistic magic to serve a world where she is an master) and the Arabian alien in every possible Nights-like Jinni (a mag- way. ic-wielding spirit made By contrast, the Jinni of flame that can take on arrives in New York via human form) not only an elaborately decorated can exist but can co-exist Arabian copper flask, with each other. used for storing olive The Golem in ques- oil, which has passed tion is female, fashioned from one generation and by a shady kabbalistic homeland to another over The Golem and the Jinni conjurer named Yehudah several centuries, before combines reality and Schaalman, to serve as reaching "Little Syria" fantasy in the early 20th- the obedient wife of an in Lower Manhattan. Its century Lower East Side. unattractive business- other use — to store a jinni — is only discovered when the local tinsmith attempts to repair its dents, and out pops a fully grown man, naked except for an iron cuff, and lacking any memory as to how he came to be enslaved and bottled for close to a millennium. The origins of these two characters are disparate, but in order to survive in the new world in which they find themselves, they must learn to adapt, accommodate and make the best of it. We soon learn that within each of these creatures exist equal amounts of enchant- ment and potential for destruction. Can they learn to tame and train their natures, as part of the cost of civilization? It's a dilemma that sounds very human, except that they are not at all human — indeed, they must learn to pass as human — and therein lies the fun and the adven- ture of this well-wrought entertainment. Outwardly, to most passers-by, the Meet The Author Novelist builds on her own experience as the Jewish wife of an Arab American. I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer school at Columbia University [in New York City] and started working on the novel." elene Wecker remembers The storyline, which introduces a happy summers in Michigan, Jewish and an Arab character from lore, visiting relatives and enjoy- comes together in New York's immigra- ing lake activities offered by tion community of the early Camp Michigania, the U-M 1900s and builds on her own alumni family camp in Boyne, experience as the Jewish wife Michigan. The daughter of of an Arab American. Shel and Gail Wecker (nee "The book reflects the plu- Ehrenberg), both Oak Park rality of my family as it grew High School grads who moved to be," says Wecker, 37, who to the Chicago suburbs, Helene will address readers at 7 p.m. dreamed, even in those early Monday, July 22, at Nicola's years, of becoming a writer. Books in Ann Arbor. Helene W ecker Practical considerations first "I love the idea of New York turned her toward marketing, having all these cultures, in communications and public relations. some cases blending but in others sort of "It took about seven years of work existing cheek by jowl. All of them have to to admit my heart was elsewhere," says struggle in very similar ways, coming to a Wecker, talking from her California home new country and having to figure out who in the Bay Area and planning a Michigan they are in this new place:' visit to introduce her first novel, The Wecker's writing started with realistic Golem and the Jinni. short stories about the family back- "I was going to be very angry with grounds of both her and her husband. myself if I didn't give writing a real try. I A friend suggested rooting fiction in the started to take a few courses, entered grad fantasy that Wecker preferred reading. H 46 July 18 • 2013 "I went back to the drawing board and made the main characters folkloric, and the story sprang from there Wecker says. "At first, the characters were sort of stand- ins for me and my husband or generic Jewish girl and generic Arab boy. "They quickly took on their own lives and concerns. The woman Golem, made of clay, is solid and quiet, seeming to exist to serve others. The [male] jinni, made of fire, is passionate and changeable, daz- zling and self-centered. "The ways the two would interact, con- stantly fighting because they are so differ- ent, became the emotional engine for a lot of the book." Wecker, who is looking forward to seeing her grandmother, Pesia Wecker of West Bloomfield, as well as her aunt and uncle, Evelyn and Fred Freeman of Farmington Hills, had to do considerable research to develop the characters and establish the historic setting. "I had to learn what it was like to live in New York at the turn of the 20th century, and I had to learn the religious underpin- nings of the people's lives" the author explains. "I grew up in a Reform household outside Chicago and had to learn about Orthodox Judaism. Sometimes, it felt like a different religion:' Wecker's husband, physicist Kareem Kazkaz, grew up without religious prac- tices, not going to mosque or church, although his dad grew up Muslim in Syria and his mother grew up Polish Catholic in Chicago. Currently, Wecker attends High Holiday services and goes to "random Shabbat and Jewish activities with friends" The couple met as undergraduates at Carleton College, a small liberal arts school in Minnesota. They have a daugh- ter, Maya, who recently celebrated her first birthday. "Since working on the book for seven years, I realized how diverse Judaism has been in America" she says. "It was so much more of a kaleidoscope than I had ever understood" ❑ Helene Wecker will talk about her book at 7 p.m. Monday, July 22, at Nicola's Books, 2513 Jackson, in the Westgate Shopping Center in Ann Arbor. (734) 662-0600; nicolasbooks.com .