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I can't believe that
Philip Roth plays to Middle America. I mean the guy couldn't be more
Jewish if he shat dreidels and dressed head to toe in potato latkes.
Christ, I'm even overwhelmed by the amount of Jewiness in
his books--and this one is the most Hebrew yet. The term that most
consistently comes to mind is "persecution complex." It's
one of those things that The Tribe is saddled with whether they like
it or not. Thousands of years of getting your ass kicked by every
race and religion under the sun will do that to a people. This is
Roth's natural persecution complex being played out to its ultimate
paranoid conclusion. What if America--a land he clearly loves but
doesn't necessarily trust--did the unthinkable and elected a right-wing,
nut job religious zealot... Uh, I mean a rightwing, isolationist Hitler
admiring fascist anti-Semite? Such is Roth's fantastical nightmare
when Charles Lindbergh defeats FDR for the third term of his presidency.
Oy, what a mess! While the book is an interesting "what if,"
the narrative gets repetitive and preachy. As a fantasy it also takes
certain things too far and others not far enough. It just doesn't
ring true. The most disappointing part of the plot is the quick and
easy way everything is resolved. The thing literally wraps up in like
ten pages and, like an episode of The Simpsons; all goes
back to normal as if nothing ever happened. Ultimately I'm left without
a sense of what the point is he's trying to make. I get it's a cautionary
tale, but for whom?
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