Book Review
Lovesong
1/5 stars
"Egomania and a string of overwrought similes"
*******
(248 pages with glossary)
A friend recommended this book to me. (I've had it on my wish list for several years at one point, but never purchased it; I should have followed my first mind and left it unpurchased.)
I can say that it isn't about much of anything; black people convert to Judaism all the time (like the current reviewer), and they all have different reasons - - of course it will never be the same story twice.
Given that I have access to my own story, and know my own reasons, I probably should have skipped this one - - along with about a trillion other books that I have not read.
It seems that he spends many years searching for something throughout his life (his conversion was finished at 43) and doing a lot of things with a lot of gusto, but he didn't seem to be too good at any of them.
-As a member of the Black Power movement.
-Then a radio DJ.
-Then through several marriages.
-And some number of affairs during the marriages.
-There was also a trip to the monastery at one point.
-He also put out a couple of unfocused albums.
-He published tons of books, none of which are any longer in print. (If this book was his peak as a writer, then he really should have tried punching a clock somewhere.)
I can imagine that he chose Judaism, because he'd probably run out of other things to try by that point.
*******
What the hell is this book, anyway?
Is it a spiritual journal?
Is it an autobiography?
Is it a travel memoir?
Is it (as it most likely seems) something that he stapled together from all of his journals? (Sidebar: It is published on a no-name label that started in 1988 and went bankrupt by 2009.)
Other Random Thoughts:
1. This guy is the most annoying writer that I think I've ever read.
It is just one overwrought simile after another, and it gets annoying after about three pages.
2. *Even back in 1969*, there is the familiar cast of characters. A bunch of stupid, low IQ black people with a lot of their ignorant, cognitively deficient ideas:
a. Holocaust denial.
b. Imagining that "black people wear the original Hebrews."
c. Any and everything is white supremacy.
(This is all in poem written by a 15-year-old. Thea Behran. [p.51])
d. Rehearsed victimhood. (And I owe this phrase to Coleman Hughes.)
3. One thing on which we are in agreement is that no one took Sammy Davis Jr seriously as a Jew (p.37).
4. It is a cliche at this point that you have black guys that are spokesman for black people/ use that as a reason to put themselves in front of any camera, but at the very first people to jump into bed with white women. ALL THREE of Julius Lester's wives were white.
5. Some of the things that this guy talks about: (p.154) "My father died and I feel so abandoned and so terribly alone. How could he do that to me?" Lester's father was 85 years old at that point. Hadn't Lester gotten it into his head that his father was going to die?
6. His practice just doesn't make any sense.
a. He converts, but nobody else in the house does.
b. Then he converts not living anywhere near synagogue, but worried about breaking Shabbat to drive someplace where there is one?
c. Havdalah is not from when you see three stars in the sky, but from a pre-calculated time.
d. (p. 163) Rabbi lander, a Reform rabbi, is "very traditional," but several pages later says that that same Rabbi is "disappointed that I decided not to be circumcised." (WTF? Lester was circumcised later, but still.)
e. (p.239) Last December was the first time there was not a Christmas tree in the house. (This was three or four years after "conversion." )
7. (p.234) Farrakhan has been ranting about Jews for DECADES. (Since 1985, in this book.) And Nation of Islam had reached its peak 10 years before the events of this book, and has been declining ever since.
Verdict: NOT recommended.