An interesting idea, I think, hidden in a narrative structure that needed some work.
Collum and Jude were high school sweethearts whose love affair was cut short. Some decades later, Collum is a famous movie star living in Australia. Jude is in the U.S., and facing ennui as a middle-aged mother in a stagnant marriage. Collum decides to abandon his marriage and try to win Jude back, but things don’t go quite as planned.
There’s a degree of fabulism in the story as the actor, Collum, takes on a couple of surprises. Working as a southern cowboy at a horse farm perhaps isn’t too far-fetched, but then he takes on the role of a Hasidic rabbi, who randomly starts calling on Jude, and Jude seems to buy it for awhile. It’s like the plot of a folk tale.
When Collum reveals himself, there’s a honeymoon period for awhile before things start to go south. Their parting decades past hinged on a huge misunderstanding, and then Collum himself was victim of a violent, racist and antisemitic father. Having not dealt with any of these issues, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Collum is resentful and abusive.
Maybe this could have been interesting commentary on why people stay in toxic relationships. I’m looking forward to reading Hannah Halperin’s latest novel on that subject, in fact. But I found myself mostly frustrated with Jude. She had the inklings of a far more interesting story, particularly in regards to her popular, sort of jerky, vs “effeminate” and loner son. In flashbacks we see how head over heels she was over Collum, but that was obviously teenage drama, where everything feels heightened and uber-important. Then there was her father’s paranoia with regards to being surrounded by violent antisemitism, which largely seemed to play out when Collum’s father came into the future. Jude’s relationship to Judaism seemed half baked, where in some areas she was knowledgeable and seemed interested, and in others not at all. A dive into her complex religious life as an adult would have also been more appealing than watching her be abused by an antisemite, and come to the realization at long last that youthful fantasies about love don’t always stand up well.
Then there’s some stuff where Collum takes off with Jude’s seemingly perfect best friend, after he spends a drunken and misogynistic bender with someone else in town, and the whole thing felt rather convenient.
On a structural level, we went back and forward in time, almost following the narrative in a stream of consciousness sort of way. (At least, chapters would flit back to the past whenever someone was thinking of something related in the present.) But the story started out on a drab note, filled with exposition about characters we didn’t know or care about yet. And again, I wish there was more nuance or care given to some of them, but the potential was certainly there by the end. And maybe I’m biased because she focused mostly on Jude and Collum, and I’d had enough of them quite quickly. I never really found them to be too compelling together, but maybe that’s just me.
So I’ll give this a three stars, cos there’s interesting ideas peppered in, including with the next generation that I haven’t talked about at all. And meh. :P I’m an easy grader. So there we go.