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Book review: Nicole Krauss Forest Dark

David Herman isn't impressed by a very literary novel

August 21, 2017 10:22
AP_050427019356
2 min read

Nicole Krauss exploded on to the American literary scene in her late 20s with her first novel, Man Walks into a Room. Three years later came The History of Love, an international best-seller, and five years after that, Great House.

Then all went a little quiet. A few short stories and essays and lots of headlines as her marriage with fellow-novelist Jonathan Safran Foer broke up. No novel in seven years. Now comes Forest Dark. The title is from the opening of Dante’s Divine Comedy: “Midway upon the journey of our life/I found myself within a forest dark…” And, indeed, the novel’s two central characters are both lost in the middle of their lives.

Epstein is huge and rich, a creature of appetites, Jewish American but strangely adrift, unmoored. In the past two years, he has lost both parents, has brought “his long, mostly stable marriage to an end” and has retired from his law firm. He has started to give away his worldly possessions and then, suddenly, he disappears. After living in Tel Aviv for three months, he vanishes.

Nicole, the other major character, is also going through some kind of mid-life crisis. “I had lost my way,” she says. She is around 40, a successful writer and seeks refuge from her “failing marriage”. She bears more than a passing resemblance to the author. She leaves New York for Israel where she meets the enigmatic Eliezer Friedman, formerly involved in Israeli intelligence and now a professor of literature obsessed with Kafka, especially a strange theory he has about how Kafka ended up in Palestine. Friedman wants to meet Nicole, the famous Jewish American writer, and get her to write about Kafka.