While the promotional material for Ayelet Waldman’s “Love and Treasure” bills it as a novel, the more accurate descriptor for this excellent and gripping work of fiction would be linked stories. Yes, the books several parts are connected – though they leap about in time, all tie back to the tragic destruction of Hungary’s Jewish community in the closing days of World War II, the soon to be defeated Nazi’s near final act of spite and evil as they sent the last mostly intact Jewish community of Central Europe into the ovens. The linchpin is the Hungarian Gold Train, literally an entire train of assets despoiled from Hungary’s Jews (worth anywhere from $1-4 billion in today’s dollars), which was seized by the US Army. Its contents were never returned. This however isn’t a history book, but a work of fine fiction, so we see the train through the eyes of Waldman’s finely rendered characters. Nor is Wadman’s fiction bound by time and space; instead her stories dances through history, each with its own unique place and voice.
The book’s first section gives the reader an elderly retired college professor at a bus station awaiting the arrival of granddaughter, Natalie, who has come to visit him in Maine. From these very first present day pages, Waldman’s gift for rendering description, particularly when presenting her characters’ inner life are on full display. “As the bus disgorged its first passengers, Jack got momentarily lost in contemplation of the disembarking soldiers, home on leave from the very ancient battlefields as in the book he was reading, from Babylon to Bactria, their camouflage fatigues the color of ash and dust, the pattern jagged, like the pixels of a computer screen.” Jack drafts his granddaughter into a mission by which he hopes to expatiate a wrong action committed many years ago when he was nominally in charge of the contents of the gold train.
From their book shifts into another story about Jack encountering the gold train as a young soldier and how, through that encounter, he fell in love. Setting off themes that will run through all the sections of this fine book, Waldman leaves the reader to ponder issues of right and wrong, of whether we exist in a world of moral absolutes and, if not, how we choose. More than anything, however, these are stories of longing and of love, hopeful stories about our efforts to find a path to happiness. This section in particular gives the reader a ground eye view of events that, because of their vastness and complexity, we usually prefer to observe from 10,000 feet. By keeping our feet planted on the ground, Waldman makes sure our heart remains always up in the air.
Shifting back to the present, in the next story Natalie journeys to Europe in order to try and accomplish her grandfather’s seemingly impossible request. There she encounters yet another character, Amitai, beset by ethical ambiguity. By the nature of these stories, we know romance will bloom, but Waldman does so subtly and in a way that brings her characters fully to life. Natalie’s journey isn’t just an effort of love on her grandfather’s behalf, but also a flight from a life in emotional turmoil. Amitai, on the other hand, believes his life wholly together though through Natalie he recognizes the way his work finding looted Holocaust art and profiting from its sale on behalf of distant heirs who knew neither the original owners nor that the art even existed, leaves him deeply compromised.
The last story, however, is perhaps the greatest surprise. I won’t ruin it with any revelation, but by style and period it takes to book in a wholly surprising and deeply satisfying direction. Often such shifts in a book can leave a reader jarred, even reeling, but Waldman’s subtle talents keep us wholly fixed to the page. Any of these sections could easily stand on their own as a fine story, but the last one would surely stand out as the best.
While we all believe we understand history, it remains for the best fiction an undiscovered country which talented authors can take readers to explore. It is a place that is, perhaps, best explored through the doorway of fine fiction. Waldman here does extraordinary work: she sheds new light on our past and our present, all through the eyes of characters that are at once peculiar and familiar. “Love and Treasure” should be added to the list of any book club. It will surely find readers shoving it into the hands of friends and strangers alike, urging them to dive into its pages. Yes, it is that good.