Shakespeare, the playwright, isn't a character in this collection, though it's easy to imagine his name dropping from the lips of any of the intellectuals who populate these interrelated stories, which follow a roughly chronological arc. The kitchen of the title belongs to Leslie Shakespeare, a think tank administrator, and his troubled wife, Eliza, with whom new arrival Ilka Weisz forms a bond that is rich and ever-changing, as are the other relationships among their coworkers at the prosperous Concordance Institute.
Friendship and love alike ebb and flow as seemingly idle talk pours out against a backdrop of passion, personal tragedy, and memories of mid-20th-century horrors. Ilka is an Austrian who escaped the Holocaust as a child; she keeps her distance from a fellow refugee, but the echoes of terror and suffering reverberate through the small Connecticut town, not merely as metaphor but literally. A small dog, aptly named Cassandra, calls out her human companions as sinners and goes unheeded. Coveted academic prizes are mixed blessings, bringing not happiness but restlessness.
Yet even as the characters verbally spar in the kitchen or around the dinner table about theories and matters of conscience, their attachment to each other remains warm and alive. Idle though the words may sound, the interplay of ideas keeps the disparate personalities connected to each other. These stories have a warm heart, even as they acknowledge that everyone has failings and no one is pure. There is a suppleness to these relationships that allows them to stretch, as friends fall out or draw closer and spouses are estranged, then reunited, then estranged again. They are all parts of the whole, connected by the enchanted elastic thread of a conversation that never ends.