Four short stories and essentially a novella, Levitation is my first foray into Ozick and her intellectual and mystical fictions. Levitation feels like a book of its time (late 70's/early 80's) with its literary dinner parties; its explorations of photography and feminism, Jewish mysticism, and psychology; and, of course, its inner and outer perceptions of NYC.
It seems that the common opinion is that Levitation contains a mixed back—to which I somewhat agree.
The opening and titular "Levitation" starts strong but seems to get lost in its own dream state by the end (or it least loses me). But the idea of the goyish Lucy watching the levitating Jewish party guests is fun and the theological vignettes are brilliant. "Puttermesser: Her Work History, Her Ancestry, Her Afterlife" feels like an unnecessary prologue after reading the final story. "Shots," contains a very funny idea about an affair that is wrapped up in some very heavy symbols and "From A Refugee's Notebook," tells, in two parts a series of odd juxtapositions—Freud's house and the Sewing Haram—which feel like positively surreal, and perhaps accurate projections of our pasts and future.
The final and novella length story, "Puttermesser and Xanthippe" feels like the most substantial story in the collection, not only for its length but because of its laser focus on the odd and familiar. Probably, a good example (for once) of something being Kafka-esque, Puttermesser is demoted and fired from her job in civil service only to summon a Golem (in the form of a young woman) who acts as her child, maid, and collaborator forcing massive change on Puttermesser and, in fact, the entire city of New York.
I think it goes without saying that Ozick is obviously brilliant—like other writers of her generation, her prose seems so impeccably solid and thoughtful and at the same time appears to have been written without much effort. Her stories are rich in detail, contradiction, and humor. Looking forward to reading more of her work.