Forgiving Maximo Rothman
A. J. Sidransky
Berwick Court Publishing, Apr 16 2013, $16.95
www.berwickcourt.com
ISBN: 9780988954007
In 2005 caregiver Marie Leguenza enters nonagenarian
Jewish immigrant Max Redmond’s apartment in 195 Bennett Avenue. Instead of the usual greeting from the frail senior
when she delivers his favorite Dominican food rather than the strict kosher of
his daughter-in-law Rachel that he hates; she finds his battered body.
NYPD Detective Anatoly Kurchenko leads the
investigation. Kurchenko notices Max’s
Orthodox son Shalom Rothman (nee Steven Redmond) and Rachel seem indifferent to
the family patriarch’s death as they focus on HaShem and their autistic son
Baruch’s participation; refusing even to ride in a car to the hospital on a
Jewish holy day.
Tolya questions Dominican youngster Carlos Pabon who visits Max twice a
week as part of his probation. On his
last visit to Max, the old man advised Carlos re his absentee father that "life
is too short to make enemies of those we love" though Redmond never forgave God for the Holocaust. The detective reads Max’s four decades of diaries
seeking clues; but finds himself fascinated by Max’s journey from Nazi Germany
to the Jewish town of Sosua in the Dominican Republic and finally upper
Manhattan. This leads him to reflect on his
estranged dad’s escape from Soviet Russia, the deaths of his sibling and
mother, and their lapsed Judaism.
This is an excellent twisting
historical that uses a police investigation as a springboard to explore six
plus decades of Judaism with a focus on the good in the 1940s Dominican
Republic and the 2005 cross culture reach out in Washington Heights, and the
ugly of the Holocaust and 1970s Soviet Russia.
This profound novel contains a fully developed cast and fascinating rotating
subplots.
Harriet Klausner
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