Thursday, January 10, 2008

The Search for Love

Somehow, and without conscious effort, I keep reading novels about Jewish people in the Arctic. The novel I reviewed earlier, The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, and this one: Away by Amy Bloom. The two novels couldn’t be more different though.

Away is the devestating but delicately written tale of Lillian Leyb, a woman who has lost everything by the time she is 22. After a Russian pogrom wipes out her entire family including her young daughter, Lillian emmigrates to New York in 1924. There she finds herself part of the Yiddish Theater as a seamstress and soon winds up the mistress of the star actor and his powerful father. But Lillian discovers that her daughter may be alive and living in Siberia and, without much to go on, is compelled to find her.

Traveling across the North America, Lillian ends up in a number of seamy situations including taking up with an African-American prostitute in Seattle, being tossed in a Vancouver women’s prison “for her own good” and wandering alone through the bitter Yukon. There are many characters along Lillian’s journey and a number of surprises both for her and for the reader. Love was never examined from so many angles. If you like a good story about a tough woman, try this terrific novel.

To check the availability of this item, go the library website at www.ci.newberg.or.us/library

Reviewed by Lori Moore

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