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Iphigenia in Forest Hills: Anatomy of a Murder Trial

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Prizewinning journalist Janet Malcolm discovers the elements of Greek tragedy in a sensational New York City murder trial

"Astringent and absorbing. . . . Iphigenia in Forest Hills casts, from its first pages, a genuine spell — the kind of spell to which Ms. Malcolm’s admirers (and I am one) have become addicted."—Dwight Garner, New York Times "This is shrewd and quirky crime reporting at its irresistible and disabused best."—Louis Begley, Wall Street Journal

"She couldn't have done it and she must have done it." This is the enigma at the heart of Janet Malcolm's riveting book about a murder trial in the insular Bukharan-Jewish community of Forest Hills, Queens, that captured national attention. The defendant, Mazoltuv Borukhova, a beautiful young physician, is accused of hiring an assassin to kill her estranged husband, Daniel Malakov, a respected orthodontist, in the presence of their four-year old child. The prosecutor calls it an act of just weeks before Malakov was killed in cold blood, he was given custody of Michelle for inexplicable reasons. It is the "Dickensian ordeal" of Borukhova's innocent child that drives Malcolm's inquiry. With the intellectual and emotional precision for which she is known, Malcolm looks at the trial—"a contest between competing narratives"—from every conceivable angle. It is the chasm between our ideals of justice and the human factors that influence every trial—from divergent lawyering abilities to the nature of jury selection, the malleability of evidence, and the disposition of the judge—that is perhaps most striking. Surely one of the most keenly observed trial books ever written, Iphigenia in Forest Hills is ultimately about character and "reasonable doubt." As Jeffrey Rosen writes, it is "as suspenseful and exciting as a detective story, with all the moral and intellectual interest of a great novel." " Iphigenia in Forest Hills is another dazzling triumph from Janet Malcolm. Here, as always, Malcolm’s work inspires the best kind of disquiet in a reader—the obligation to think." —Jeffrey Toobin, author of The Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court "A remarkable achievement that ranks with Malcolm's greatest books. Her scrupulous reporting and interviews with protagonists on both sides of the trial make her own narrative as suspenseful and exciting as a detective story, with all the moral and intellectual interest of a great novel." —Jeffrey Rosen, author of The Supreme The Personalities and Rivalries that Defined America

168 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2011

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About the author

Janet Malcolm

25 books515 followers
Janet Malcolm was a journalist, biographer, collagist, and staff writer at The New Yorker. She is the author of In the Freud Archives and The Crime of Sheila McGough , as well as biographies of Gertrude Stein, Sylvia Plath, and Anton Chekhov.

The Modern Library chose her controversial book The Journalist and the Murderer — with its infamous first line — as one of the 100 best non-fiction works of the 20th century.

Her most recent book is Forty-one False Starts .

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 142 reviews
Profile Image for Matt.
1,052 reviews31.1k followers
January 9, 2022
“In life, no story is told exactly the same way twice. As the damp clay of actuality passes from hand to hand, it assumes different artful shapes. We expect it to. Only in trials is making it pretty equated with making it up…”
- Janet Malcolm, Iphigenia in Forest Hills


Janet Malcolm’s Iphigenia in Forest Hills is short and sleek and polished to a high gleam. In terms of technical precision, its “anatomy” of a New York City murder trial in 2009 is a flawless example of the craft of true-crime journalism. Artfully structured with a fractured chronology that bounces around in time, filled with devastatingly glib character assessments, and dotted with well-honed sentences designed to land with maximum impact, Iphigenia in Forest Hills has an air of impeccability about it. I enjoyed it immensely, finishing it in the course of a day. Yet for all that, it started to fade from memory almost as soon as I closed the covers for the last time.

Starting life as a New Yorker article, Iphigenia in Forest Hills covers the murder trial of Mazoltuv Borukhova and Mikhail Mallayev. Both were implicated in the murder of orthodontist Daniel Malakov, Borukhova’s estranged husband. Mallayev was the supposed hitman, gunning down Malakov in a park, as he was set to exchange physical custody of his four year-old daughter with his wife. Borukhova, a doctor, was accused of hiring Mallayev.

The motive, as Malcolm discusses – in a rather infuriating trip into Family Court – was a judge’s apparently-random decision to remove the little girl from her mother’s home and place her with her father.

Malcolm is a fantastic writer, known for delivering lines with punch and verve. Iphigenia in Forest Hills is no exception. She is consistently readable, even – perhaps especially – when she is making incredibly broad assertions about the legal system based wholly on her own anecdotal observations. Some might find it off-putting, the way she casually tosses off her weighty conclusions, but I rather liked it. I don’t want to read an anonymous book. I want to read a book by an author who has a certain style, a certain attitude. You don’t need to read Malcolm’s name on the cover to know when you’ve stumbled onto her work.

As I noted above, Malcolm does not hew to a linear chronology. Instead, the first page starts with the defense putting Borukhova on the stand to testify in her own defense. From there she loops back, then jumps forward, all a little dizzyingly, but never in such a way that you lose sight of the process.

For me, the highlights of Iphigenia in Forest Hills were Malcolm’s thumbnail sketches. For instance, she writes of the prosecutor:

He is a short, plump man with a mustache, who walks with the quick darting movements of a bantam cock and has a remarkably high voice, almost like a woman’s, which at moments of excitement rises to the falsetto of a phonograph record played at the wrong speed…In his winter outerwear – a black calf-length coat and a black fedora – he could be taken for a Parisian businessman or a Bulgarian psychiatrist…


Of the judge, a prosecutor-friendly jurist, she pithily notes:

Hanophy is a man of seventy-four with a small head and a large body and the faux-genial manner that American petty tyrants cultivate.


Though I came for the zingers, I stayed for Malcolm’s perceptiveness. She followed the trial closely, and her descriptions of the big moments – the cross examination of an expert witness; key rulings made by the judge; a rushed closing statement – ring true.

For all its qualities, though, Iphigenia in Forest Hills lacked something ineffable. Malcolm connects with just about every blow she sets out to unleash, yet they fail to generate anything resembling a lasting impact.

One reason, I suspect, is that neither the two defendants nor the victim come across as likeable or sympathetic. Mallayev, the triggerman, is an inert lump, his fractured English like a parody of a Russian mobster. Borukhova, the desperate mother – an enraged Clytemnestra, in Malcolm’s formulation – is manipulative and strange. The victim, Malakov, is barely mentioned, and we see him only indirectly, through the allegations against him by Borukhova, that he was a domestic abuser, a pedophile.

Malcolm’s inability to humanize these three is partly a function of their backgrounds. As Russian immigrants who were also Bukharan Jews, they were only partly assimilated, and separated by the barriers of an orthodox religion and the necessity for a translator.

Partly, though, they just don’t seem like super great people. The families, especially, make compassion difficult. Both the Borukhovas and the Malakovs cultivated dark grudges against each other. To a certain extent, this makes sense. On the other hand, there comes a time when you start to wonder if there is any grief at all, beneath all that anger. Both sides lack the ability to recognize a tragedy; instead, they see only a vendetta.

Another issue I had with Iphigenia in Forest Hills is that it felt reported, rather than lived.

Immediately before picking this up, I read Joe McGinniss’s Fatal Vision, which Malcolm famously dissected with an extremely sharp literary scalpel. Fatal Vision has massive flaws, flaws that are embodied by its author. With that said, there is no doubting the effort that McGinniss made to bore deep into his subject case.

There is no such depth on display here.

The best true crime burrows into the heart and soul of humankind. The best true crime recognizes that most criminals are frighteningly similar to us. Not monsters, but fellow travelers fated to journey on a darker path. The best true crime corrals powerful emotions: the aching mystery of an unsolved crime; the anxiety-inducing need to free an innocent man; the weighty, ever-long melancholia of a murder victim’s family.

Iphigenia in Forest Hills did not spark any emotional response from me. There is much in it to admire, but it is too cold, too distant, to be really memorable.
Profile Image for Beverly.
950 reviews467 followers
May 28, 2021
The Journalist and the Murderer is a great true crime book by Janet Malcolm in which she explores the ethics of what a reporter owes to his subject. Joe McGinnis tricks Jeffrey MacDonald into giving him unlimited access to him while he is undergoing a murder trial for the killing of his family. What McGinnis doesn't tell MacDonald is that his book Fatal Vision, which became a best seller, is not advocating his innocence. He led MacDonald to believe that so he could continue interviewing him, but McGinnis thinks he's guilty and says so in his book.

This slim volume is another true crime book by her: this time it deals with what happens to a murder case in the court system. A doctor is accused of killing her orthodontist husband over a custody battle for their little girl. Malcolm looks with unflinching honesty at not corruption in the court officers, but mostly incompetence, hubris, bias, and callousness. No one wins, justice is not served and the child suffers the most.
Profile Image for Kansas.
812 reviews486 followers
August 18, 2025

https://kansasbooks.blogspot.com/2025...

“La fragilidad humana sigue siendo moneda de cambio y la maldad, el impulso que anima al periodista. Un juicio proporciona oportunidades únicas a un periodista despiadado. Los periodistas que asisten juntos a un juicio prolongado desarrollan una camaradería especial que nace del buen animo compartido: sus artículos se escriben solos; basta con tirar de la fruta madura que cuelga de los atroces relatos de los letrados. Pueden sentarse tranquilamente y disfrutar de la función.”


Hacia tiempo que quería leer algo de Janet Malcolm aunque no sea mi tipo de lectura habitual pero es cierto que a veces tienes que salir de tu zona de confort para conocer otras aproximaciones literarias, y el hecho de que Janet Malcolm fuera sobre todo periodista, no la hace menos literaria. Me llamaba la atención la fama que tenía por sus enfoques críticos sobre el periodismo y lo que me interesaba sobre todo, era ver si era capaz de cuestionar las convenciones éticas a las que se enfrenta todos los días el periodismo. En algún momento aborda la cuestión de la fragilidad humana contrapuesta a la objetividad de la narración. Somos testigos todos los días de como las noticias nos llegan ya manipuladas y nunca estamos del todo seguros de esta objetividad en beneficio del morbo y del sensacionalismo y en detrimento de esta fragilidad humana. Janet Malcolm que había seguido un juicio para el New Yorker donde la doctora Borujova es enjuiciada por haber contratado a un asesino para matar a su ex marido Daniel Malakov, tras haber perdido ella la custodia de su hija Michelle, convierte este libro en el testimonio de su perspectiva, no solo como periodista a la hora de analizar la objetividad con que se cuentan estas noticias, sino que el libro también sirve como análisis del sistema judicial americano en el que viene a decir que la verdad es lo que menos importará, sino que la puesta en escena de un circo mediático es lo único que acaba valiendo. El elenco de actores de este show, letrados, acusados, jurado, testigos, estenógrafos, intérpretes y jueces, acudiran todos los días a una obra de teatro donde se está juzgando, en este caso, a dos personas de asesinato, y aquí comenzarán a confluir una serie de factores en la que la verdad se verá distorsionada.


“En la vida ninguna historia se cuenta dos veces exactamente de la misma manera. Va cobrando formas distintas conforme la arcilla de la actualidad pasa de mano en mano. Y no nos sorprende. Solo en los juicios esto se equipara con la falsedad. “


El crimen que sucede frente a la hija de cuatro años se convierte en una especie de circo mediático cuando llega a los tribunales. Lo que añade una dimensión cultural y comunitaria al tema es el hecho de que sus protagonistas forman parte de una comunidad religiosa cerrada de judíos bujaries de Queens, con normas muy rígidas en torno a la familia, el matrimonio y el estatus y esto le servirá a Janet Malcolm no solo para reflexionar sobre el sistema judicial sino sobre la vulnerabilidad del individuo frente a este sistema judicial, en este caso el de la supuesta asesina: una madre que lucha por conservar a su hija y termina sentada en un tribunal acusada de un crimen (“Había recurrido al Estado en busca de ayuda y el Estado se la había proporcionado, pero, a cambio de su protección, le exigía el control de una parte de su vida, su maternidad”) y es de aquí de donde viene el titulo de este libro, porque la historia de Borujova, su marido asesinado y su hija Michelle, evoca la tragedia griega. Según Esquilo, Clitemnestra se ve obligada a asesinar a Agamenón en parte para vengar la muerte de su hija Ifigenia, que fue sacrificada por su padre para triunfar en la guerra. “Estúpida, estúpida, ¿qué has hecho? No volverás a ver a Michelle nunca.” En este aspecto Janet Malcolm muestra un gran refinamiento enlazando la figura de Ifigenia con la de Michelle, la verdadera víctima de este embrollo, sacrificada en aras de intereses orquestados por adultos porque desde el momento en que sus padres entran en conflicto y uno de los dos acaba asesinado, ya está sacrificada como lo fue Ifigenia. Janet Malcolm está continuamente poniendo en evidencia su propio papel en el relato, el de periodista que se debe a la objetividad, y de alguna forma y a través de este análisis, expresa lo difícil que será el límite entre ficción, representación y verdad, expondrá todos los puntos, los fallos del sistema judicial en el que las víctimas siempre serán los más frágiles, y donde el poder de la manipulación será el auténtico progagonista, sobre todo también viene a reflejar que el ser humano no es un autómata y que por defecto siempre tomará partido, forma parte de la naturaleza humana.


“En una sala judicial nadie debe ir con nadie. Pero todos lo llevamos en la sangre: tomamos partido igual que respiramos. “


Lo que hace Janet Malcolm es periodismo literario porque el texto tiene ritmo y lo va guiando de tal forma que el propio lector tiene que ir tomando decisiones. “El periodismo es una cuestion de confianza. Los periodistas no nos retorcemos las manos ni nos rasgamos las vestiduras ante los delitos y las tragedias sin sentido que nos proporcionan nuestras noticias. Explicamos y acusamos.” Janet Malcolm da los datos de esta madeja de lana enmarañada pero no da las respuestas porque le interesa más el proceso y cómo se intenta construir la verdad en un tribunal..., la verdad estará muy escondida e incluso ninguno de los actores de este circo sepa realmente dónde está esa verdad. Es interesante como una vez llegado al final, lo que nos viene a decir Janet Malcolm es que desconfíemos de las verdades absolutas, del relato oficial que se escuda bajo las bases del poder y la manipulación. La autora insiste en la subjetividad del autor pero también es verdad que no construye sus personajes como personajes de ficción, aunque si les da entidad a la hora de situarlos. Su estilo frío y analítico va revelando las grietas de un sistema en el que la fragilidad humana apenas es contemplada y cuestiona tanto el sensacionalismo del periodismo fácil como a nosotros a la hora de dejarnos manipular sin interpretar los hechos como se merecerían


“Los expedientes judiciales no revelan lo que en realidad estaba ocurriendo entre Borujova y Malakov mientras su matrimonio se desintegraba. Los expedientes judiciales son una burda alegoría de la mala fe, poblada de personajes exagerados y unidimensionales. Pese a todo, algo de verdad se filtra en ellos, como sucede con todo lo que se escribe o se dice.”

♫♫♫ Lullaby - The Cure ♫♫♫
Profile Image for Jos M.
444 reviews5 followers
January 20, 2021
I was deeply, deeply uncomfortable with this book. It is a really interesting and tragic story. It is also depicts events in a (to me) really interesting community that is not much covered in the media. Having said that, while I am sure Malcolm's intention is to puncture the Orientalist narratives that pervaded the trial coverage, I feel like that she in fact feeds into them. What else is the reader to make of passages like "she looked like a captive barbarian princess in a Roman triumphal procession"? Man, I feel like, don't call anyone a barbarian - unless they're Conan - is writing 101.

In addition I also found the classical allusions referenced in a way I deeply dislike - Iphigenia is the 4 year old daughter of two parents involved in a custody battle who sees her father be shot in front of her no wait, is the daughter of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon who Agamemnon sacrifices to Artemis so the Mycenaean fleet can get a favourable wind to Troy -- sure, sometimes. Sometimes she is replaced by a deer and has a lively trade in sacrificing foreigners on the Crimean peninsula. Sometimes she is taken to her murder, deceived, kicking and screaming. Sometimes she walks as a warrior, happy to die for her polis. She is a complex character basically. As is Clytemnestra. So here, Malcolm's metaphor is not even a particularly apt one to my mind, but it only exists to signal how clever and educated Malcolm, and I think has the effect of making the custody dispute between Borukhova and Malakov seem more antiquated and more barbarous (there's that word again). And I think this is a really big problem, because part of the reason Borukhova couldn't get reasonable dealing with the court determining the custody of her daughter is because of these very ideas about her as a mother and woman.
Profile Image for Betsy.
341 reviews
August 26, 2011


An engrossing blow-by-blow account of a very strange crime and trial involving very strange people by a writer known for her piercing critiques of journalists. This time Janet Malcolm takes on the court system (although her critique extends to reporters covering the trials) - and family law, including the courts overseeing ex-spouses warring over child custody.

In this particular case, there is one clear-cut loser - the child, who witnesses her dad's death at age 4. (And the dad who was murdered...) Malcolm is surprisingly sympathetic to the mother, who is accused of hiring her ex-husband's assassin and who, beyond that, doesn't have an appealing personality. I wasn't quite as sympathetic although the original custody decision did seem wrong-headed (at least according to Malcolm's account) and the lawyer appointed to represent the child did seem nuts and the judge in the murder trial did seem like a pompous jerk. The book - which I read part of originally in The New Yorker - raises thorny questions about family law, including how young children caught between warring parents should best be represented in court and if, at a minimum, the lawyers appointed to represent these poor kids have to actually meet their clients, ask what their wishes are, and pursue those in court.

I also had to do some reading up on the original Iphigenia....
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,247 reviews35 followers
March 3, 2019
3.5 rounded up

I've fast discovered that Janet Malcolm is a writer I can turn to when I want reliably engaging and well written non-fiction. In the past few weeks I've read The Journalist and the Murderer and The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, and now this, and while I don't think any of these books are perfect I can't sing Malcolm's praises highly enough.

While I think this book is probably the weakest of the three I've read it still makes for an engrossing true crime read. If you're looking for answers on who committed the crime this isn't the place to find them - Malcolm's research raises more new question than it answers. A common criticism in other reviews is how elusive the accused (Mazoltuv Borukhova, a 35 year old doctor from the Bukharan-Jewish community in Forest Hills, Queens) is, which I would definitely agree with. But this book succeeds in Malcolm's access to and interviews of the peripheral characters related to the crime. This definitely won't be the last of Malcolm's writing I read.
Profile Image for AC.
2,213 reviews
September 20, 2019
A fascinating book, one of Malcolm’s most riveting, details a bizarre murder trial that involves the Bukharan Central Asian Jews living in Forest Hills, Queens. My only criticism is that Malcolm has not updated the book to include the appeal, and Iphigenia’s fate, an appeal that was handled by Nathan Dershowitz.

A brief review of Wikipedia shows that one of the more prominent American Bukharan Jews is none other than Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson (from Janet Malcolm’s justly acclaimed *In the Freud Archives*.)
Profile Image for Justine.
47 reviews
November 23, 2020
My first court room drama! Made me really hate lawyers and judges.
123 reviews14 followers
May 24, 2011



Agamemnon had angered the goddess, Artemis, by bragging that he was a better hunter. To punish him, she becalmed his fleet as he attempted to reach Troy and defeat that city in battle. Desperate for victory Agamemnon promised he would do what ever Artemis desired if his fleet could move on to Troy. Artemis agreed to send the wind to fill the sails of his fleet if Agamemnon killed his daughter, Iphigenia. Agamemnon sent a message to Clytemnestra, telling her to bring Iphigenia to him so that she could be wed to Achilles. When mother and daughter arrive, Iphigenia dies and Agamemnon sails to Troy. Upon his return, Clytemnestra kills him for the loss of Iphigenia.

IPHIGENIA IN FOREST HILLS is a simpler story. In this case, Iphigenia is Michelle Malakov, a four year-old caught in a divorce and custody battle, that could not end well. Michelle was the daughter of Daniel Malakov, a very successful orthodontist in Queens, New York and Mazoltov Borukhova, a very successful internist. Until the birth of Michelle, family members described the couple as very much in love. Daniel was a romantic and he adored his wife, a woman of formidable intelligence and will. Daniel and Mazoltov, known as Marina, were Bukharan Jews, having emigrated from an area of the Soviet Union that disappeared after the break-up of the USSR. Instead of enriching the family, Michelle’s birth ended it because Marina would not share her daughter with anyone.

A divorce was inevitable and it was one of the worst the judge or the lawyers on both sides had had to deal with. Marina was her own worst enemy; her arrogance when questioned in court led, for a reason not explained, to Daniel being given custody of Michelle with Marina allowed visitation. Neither parent had asked for custody; both had assumed Michelle would live with Marina and Daniel would have a degree of shared custody. But when the judge gave Daniel custody, the death of the father became an inevitability.

Daniel and Marina came from a religious culture in which men and women did not choose their marital partners. Arranged marriages were the responsibility of matchmakers who would present potential partners to the parents of the intended couple and then to the two people most involved. Both the Malakov and Borukhova families did not want Daniel and Marina to marry, although the specifics of that are not given in the book. But Daniel and Marina, marrying within months of meeting, flouted that convention, two people in a modern world without the tools necessary to navigate it.

On the morning of October 28, 2007, Daniel Malakov left his office to bring Michelle to the playground at the local elementary school in order for her to spend time with her mother. As Daniel stood next to Michelle, a man stepped forward, took a gun out of the pocket of his jacket, and shot Daniel in the chest. Within moments, Daniel was dead. Marina took her daughter and ran, an instinctive reaction, to get the child away from the murder scene and the body of her father. The man with the gun was Mikhail Mallayev, Marina’s cousin by marriage, who had come from Georgia after agreeing to kill Daniel for $20,000.00.

The subtitle of the book by New Yorker author Janet Malcolm is “Anatomy Of A Murder Trial”. The book is only 155 pages and its focus is the trial so there isn’t any information about the police investigation. Even a person without any legal background can see significant mistakes made by both sides and some rulings by the judge that should have led to a mistrial or a successful appeal. But both of the accused were found guilty and even Alan Dershowitz could not prevail at the appeal. The book is worth reading because of its candid snapshots of how the system does, and doesn’t, work. As the author puts it, “She couldn’t have done it and she must have done it.”

To some degree, Malcolm gives a glimpse of life in the very closed community of the Bukharan Jews. The trial brought a great deal of publicity to a group who keeps carefully to themselves. Daniel and Marina were well-educated and were apparently aware of society outside their community. This is not true for many other groups of the most conservative branches of Orthodox Jews. For two years, I taught secular studies at a private school for Orthodox girls who would attend “seminary” for one year after graduation from high school and who then would be married to young men chosen by their parents. They had no knowledge of the outside world. Newspapers and television were not allowed in their homes and secular studies teachers were very restricted in the topics which could be discussed in class. The girls did not know about the attacks on 9/11. Marina Bukharov was allowed a much wider world and she used the information from the wider world to have her husband killed.

The Iphigenia in Forest Hills did not lose her life, but her mother killed her father, albeit a step removed, in order to get what she wanted. Whether in mythology or in Queens, both girls were pawns.
Profile Image for Rachel.
947 reviews36 followers
April 17, 2025
Currently reading Claire Dederer's MONSTERS and very on board with my new habit of loving lady intellectuals. I reread THE JOURNALIST AND THE MURDERER not long ago and flagged the fuck out of it; seeking more crime courtroom drama I landed on this. Malcolm has no mercy (re: an attorney "he dropped the unappetizing hit man from his maw and loped toward his more delectable prey") which makes for a wickedly satisfying read.

We go through life mis-hearing and mis-seeing and misunderstanding so that the stories we tell ourselves will add up.

Only in trials is making it pretty equated with making it up.
Profile Image for Ed .
479 reviews43 followers
December 15, 2016
Janet Malcolm takes the title from “Iphigenia at Aulis” by Euripides in which King Agamemnon, leading the Greek army against Troy has been thwarted by the winds that refuse to blow, his men cooped up in ships that can’t leave the harbor. Agamemnon has been convinced that the only way that the wind will rise allowing his troopships to sail to Troy is to sacrifice is daughter, Iphigenia”. Iphigenia here is Michelle, the four-year old daughter of Daniel Malakov and Marina Borukhova who are in a fierce post-divorce custody battle. Marina is accused of hiring a cousin by marriage to kill Daniel, who is shot dead while at a playground with his daughter.

Michelle is Iphigenia, in this case a child whose welfare is used as a pretext in battles among adults, vicious battles indeed. Everyone hated Marina by the end of the trial as had many judges and court officials who had dealt with her in the custody case. Janet Malcolm seems to think that the evidence of Marina’s guilt was not persuasive, that the trial judge was biased against her (not to mention more interested in starting his vacation on time than seeing justice done or even running a fair and decorous courtroom) and that he clearly favored the prosecution. This last point seemed maddeningly obvious when the judge gave the prosecutor a weekend to prepare his closing argument while Marina’s lawyer had 12 hours.

The real subject of the book, something which Malcolm has approached from slightly different directions in wildly different settings, is the difference between a convincing narration of events accepted as true by courts and the public and that which is true to the participants in the events and, of course to the storyteller—Janet Malcolm. She is brilliant on journalist and journalism having created a lot of enemies in the profession by her ability to cut through the fiction of the objective chronicler simply telling it how it is.

No one is depicted as the way they think they really are. Malcolm’ protagonists, which might seem to be an odd term to use in non-fiction but as accurate as anything could be, are often outraged and feel betrayed by her when the book or article is published, thinking that by opening up to Malcolm they must have convinced her of their innocence/altruism/tolerance when they were actually giving her further insights that led to a depiction of them that outraged them. Malcolm has been sued, threatened, cursed, damned to hell and cut dead by those involved in events she has reported on. Everyone thinks she there for them, to tell their story and set the record straight when what Malcolm is always doing is showing how prejudice, ignorance and fear were much more important to the result of a court case or investigation than anything resembling truth.
Profile Image for Maryann MJS1228.
76 reviews2 followers
December 15, 2015
This is not a true crime book and Janet Malcolm is not an author who seeks to entertain. Nor is she the sort of author who fades into the background of her writing. More often than not, a critique of any of her books becomes a critique of her. Fortunately Malcolm is as ready to rumble as any star of the WWE. To read any of Malcolm's work for a dispassionate recitation of events is to be disappointed and to, well, miss the point. She seeks to understand what the events reveal about us. She does not stand on the sidelines and pretend to be unbiased - she has an opinion and she draws conclusions.

The bare facts are: Mazoltuv Borukhova is accused of hiring an assassin to murder his husband in front of her. Borukhova and the hired killer are put on trial, a highly imperfect trial in Malcolm's estimation. Her idiosyncratic take is on every page: "But rooting is in our blood; we take sides as we take breaths." It takes a bold writer to indulge in this herself: "That's what I think was going on. No one will ever be able to prove it. But that's exactly what happened."

Malcolm wants readers to see that we all impose our own interpretation on the testimony. We construct our own narrative, based on our own experiences and prejudices. We may seek the truth, but our version becomes the truth. "We explain and blame. We are connoisseurs of certainty." She offers her own version and, be warned, she is sympathetic to Borukhova. Malcolm wants to know what drove events and expands her search beyond what is said in court.

If you haven't like Malcolm's earlier books, you won't like this one. I have a soft spot for a writer who can sidle up to a prospective interview and offer the following reporter's come on "I went up to him and asked if Anna Freud's project ... had been an influence on his work." Combine that unashamedly intellectually approach with Malcolm's pointed ruminations on the impossibility of narrowing accountability for a crime into a narrative that will fit into a courtroom and you have a compelling, unsettling book.
Profile Image for Jillwilson.
823 reviews
June 26, 2011
I love this writer's work although this is not her best book. Like Helen Garner, she often writes about interesting real-life events. This is a book about a real-life American woman accused of murdering her husband because of a custody dispute. The title comes from Greek mythology - Iphigenia was the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra who was ordered by the goddess Artemis to be sacrificed. What doesn't work about the story is the fact that it's hard to get a sense of the central character. What does work is the chilling underbelly which is about the kind of State-based interventions in the life of the small child at the centre of the story, the "Iphigenia". Like Graner, Malcolm places herself in the narrative and we follow her reactions along with the story.
Profile Image for Chris Hart.
443 reviews2 followers
September 2, 2020
This slim volume is unsatisfying in many ways:
It doesn't focus on the courtroom battle to satisfy law junkies.
It doesn't focus on the murder enough to satisfy true crime junkies.
It doesn't flesh out the unique culture of the Bukharan Jewish community in New York to satisfy those interested in anthropology.

The daughter who was allegedly the motive behind everything (hence the title) is barely a shadow in the pages. Her existence gets less page time than that of her court-ordered legal representative.
Profile Image for Maha.
167 reviews16 followers
September 24, 2017
Despite my engagement with this book, and completing it, I found Malcolm's crime reporting to be disjointed. Not as enthralling as other reviewers have made it out to be.
Profile Image for Jill Meyer.
1,188 reviews121 followers
February 23, 2019
In "Iphigenia in Forest Hills", journalist Janet Malcolm has recounted the story of a murder trial in a completely dispassionate voice. That the writing could be taken almost entirely from a court reporter's records was done on purpose, I suppose, to give the reader a completely objective view of the case. However, it also places the reader at too much of a "remove" from the case or characters.

In 2007, a Bukharan-Jewish orthodontist, Daniel Malakov, was gunned down in a park, in front of his estranged wife and their 4 year old daughter. The daughter was the subject of a bitter custody case, and the wife, Marina Borukhova, was immediately the chief suspect in the murder. A relative-by-marriage to Borukhova, was tracked down by police and the two were charged with homicide and murder-for-hire. After a three week trial, both were found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. The daughter went to live with her father's brother and his family.

Okay, most true-crime books are written with a lot of heated rhetoric. The victims - usually women - are always described as "beautiful", even if they're not, because "beautiful" victims are worth more press. In Malcolm's book, the convicted murderer is described as "beautiful", though "plain-at-best" seems to be more the truth. That one example of heated rhetoric is about the only one I could find in the book, and I suppose the book's publisher's sales team had the word put in there to "goose" the sales.

By reading Malcolm's book, I learned about the closely-knit Bukharan-Jewish community in New York, made up of Russian emigrants who arrived here in the 1980's and 1990's and settled in the Forest Hills area of Queens. Both the victim and his wife - who was an internist - chose the wrong partner-in-life and divorce was the answer to their problems. Their daughter was caught in the middle, custody given to the father in an inexplicable court rendering shortly before the murder.On a sunny day, the father was gunned down. Lots of fighting between the two families and the whole business told in a reporter's tone.

Now, I really don't know if writing a true-crime book in a dispassionate voice IS a bad thing. I certainly am glad I read Malcolm's book and it is well-written, in a technical sense. And there was a little, enough actually, spark to her writing that I sensed a slight favoritism towards the convicted wife and her troubles. But, I could have learned as much by reading the accounts from the New York Times articles about the murder and trial.

I will be interested to see other readers' takes on Malcolm's book. I can recommend it but I just wish I felt more connected to the characters and the case.
Profile Image for Blue Cypress Books.
263 reviews14 followers
February 28, 2018
I rarely read true-crime/criminal procedure books but was intrigued by this Janet Malcolm work primarily based on the recently proliferation of true crime shows and podcasts like Serial. It took a moment to catch the story threads as Malcolm doesn't write in a typical beginning-middle-end style. Like most real-life stories, there is no neat or clean ending and that was frustrating but felt authentic.
Profile Image for Ditchface.
19 reviews1 follower
February 8, 2020
The real villain of the piece is not the husband or the wife, or the wife's family or the husband's family, but the absurdities and incidentals of the supposed 'justice' system. They wrap up the trial because the Judge is scheduled to be in the Caribbean?! Some utter nutjob conspiracy theory lawyer is charged with deciding a four-year-old child's future?! It's wonderfully written, but it is a tragedy through and through.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
481 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2021
A really short book about a murder trial. It does not give much background. It just reports and lets the reader draw conclusions. I was hoping for more.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
500 reviews
June 16, 2011
In this spare volume, Malcolm recaps the trial of a young internist, Mazoltuv Borukhova, a member of the insular Bukharan-Jewish community of Forest Hills, Queens, who stands accused of hiring an assassin to murder her husband, Daniel Malakov, an orthodontist. Malcolm attacks the criminal justice system and the "hollowness of the presumption of innocence." The evidence against Dr. Borukhova was thin (e.g., 91 cell phone calls between Dr. Borukhova and the alleged hitman preceding the murder), but the prosecutor established a powerful motive for the killing: the estranged couple's young daughter was tragically and inexplicably placed in her father's custody just weeks before Daniel's murder. Malcolm, who clearly feels some affinity for Dr. Boruhova (despite the jury's distaste for the defendant because she was lacking in the requisite emotion), summarizes the case: "She couldn't have done it and she must have done it."
Profile Image for Michale.
1,011 reviews14 followers
February 17, 2020
As the title indicates, Malcolm's true focus is not the murder trial of Mazoltov Borukhova for hiring a hit man to gun down her ex Daniel Malakov in a Forest Hills playground. Underlying all the descriptions of the testimony and characters involved in the trial is the reality that Michelle, their small daughter, is left parent-less by her father's murder and her mother's imprisonment. I found the description of the judge's insistence in sticking to a schedule so that he could end the trial and leave for a scheduled vacation (rather than attempt to elucidate the truth) chilling. Even more frightening is the control a child's legal guardian exercises over that child, even if he has no relationship with her, and his agenda may be at odds with what are the best interests of the child.
Profile Image for Martin Cerjan.
129 reviews4 followers
April 11, 2011
Quick, good read; very well written in a conversational style a la the New Yorker. This book was of particular interest to me since the murder in question happened about a block from my apartment. The author does a good job of criticizing the jury trial system--and many other aspects of the bureaucratic state--without going overboard. She manages to maintain the air of mystery throughout the book. The Bukharian Jewish community in Queens makes for interesting reading and I wish the author had spent more time talking about it. Like a lot of Russian novels, it was not always easy to keep the characters straight!
Profile Image for Libby.
169 reviews6 followers
February 14, 2012
Noted journalist Janet Malcolm writes about the trial of Dr. Mazoltov Borukhova, accused of using a hitman, Mikhail Malleyev, to kill her ex-husband, orthodontist Daniel Malakov, who had been awarded custody of their young daughter Michelle by a judge. She exposes a lot of the problems with the legal system that convicted both Borukhova and Malleyev (both serving life sentences without parole) as well as opening a curtain on the insular Bukharan-Jewish community of Forest Hills. It's a fascinating read about a sordid situation--one shudders to think of what will become of Michelle after seeing her father killed before her eyes.
Profile Image for Christina.
103 reviews18 followers
February 3, 2012
I found this book kind of flat. It reads like someone's notes from the courtroom gallery, but doesn't seem to really formulate a story with an end.
In being nonpartisan, Janet Malcolm more or less offloads the facts she's gathered and ends the book without making any of the players involved sympathetic (with the exception of the little girl, Michelle).
Profile Image for Hank Stuever.
Author 4 books2,031 followers
September 1, 2011
I admire the precision and analysis and difficult (even unanswerable questions) Malcolm has always brought to her work, and she is still doing it in her mid-70s, which right there sets her apart from her peers. I think her book "The Crime of Sheila McGough" is a better deconstruct of competing (multiple) courtroom narratives, albeit in civil court rather than criminal.
Profile Image for Simone.
170 reviews6 followers
December 3, 2012
An intelligent, engaging study of the modern American justice system that will educate and horrify and amaze.
375 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2015
It's possible mystery/detective fiction has ruined me, but I found this a bit flat compared with fictional courtroom drama.
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