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Review: The Believers

How faith fills the void when ideology implodes

October 10, 2008 13:45

By

Madeleine Kingsley,

Madeleine Kingsley

2 min read

By Zoe Heller
Fig Tree, £16.99

‘If in doubt," the rubric runs, "ask the rabbi." That's not the way of things in the faith-forgotten Litvinoff family, who habitually return barmitzvah invitations with "There is no God" scrawled over the engraving. In Zoe Heller's cruelly clever new novel, Joel and Audrey Litvinoff are the (eponymous and tongue-in-cheek) believers. Theirs is the third generation to have rejected Judaism since Joel's refugee grandma caused a shanda (scandal), flinging her headscarf into New York harbour as the Statue of Liberty loomed.

It is radicalism that the couple have believed in for 40 years - though, post 9/11, shanda territory has shifted. Joel, the longstanding celebrity left-winger and hotshot lawyer, no longer commands the same activist admiration.The papers dub him "rent-a-radical".

At 72, he is defending an Al Qaeda camp trainee in a high-profile trial when he suffers a stroke in court. Audrey, daughters Karla - obese and downtrodden - and Rosa, along with reprobate, adopted son, Lenny - whom Audrey clearly and deliberately favours over the girls - congregate at the bedside of the comatose Joel. So, disturbingly, does a large, dreadlocked, black woman who may, or may not, have rights.

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