Concernig the titular story only:
Right, so this was a pretty good one, in spite of getting near mired in the muck (literally).
It begins with some subtle foreshadowing: “I . . . journeyed out TO SEE THE TREE.”
There is more in this vein, or should I say, xylem, e.g. “the COMELY neck of the [tree] limb.
“Fathers like ours don’t know how to love. They live too much indoors.”
The red herring – “Idolatry is the abomination . . . not philosophy.”
The damning epigraph that leads to this epitaph-tale. Whereas Shakespeare once penned “What’s past is prologue,” yet here the overwhelming weight of underlying indoctrinated culture irreversibly sets the mold.
Of the several stories we have read (Short Story Club) highlighting and self-deprecatingly lowbrowing Yiddishness (Mishnaicness?) this one certainly rings the bell. (Although I found it hard to pin down specific quotable examples to present here, nevertheless the aura succeeds in this regard spectacularly.)
The uniquely colorful phrases; for an avid reader – “wearing the look of a man half-sotted with print.”
The line about uttering “Bring the tea.” Again, “He could concoct holiness out of the fine line of a serif.” By the way Sans Serif is a flutingly fanciful moniker meaning, simply, plain.
The Yogi-ism to consider:
“What are they like, those people?”
“They’re exactly like us, if you can think what we would be if we were like them.”
Ponder that thought in this age of discordancy.
Another harbinger of trouble brewing, “To them their bodies are holy.”
Then there is the clever dichotomy of having the wife Sheindal (“beautiful”), once physically liberated from a concentration camp, married to a man who becomes convinced escape comes from release of the soul from the incarnation.
Then there is the clever dichotomy of having the wife Sheindal (“beautiful”), once physically liberated from a concentration camp, married to a man who becomes convinced escape comes from release of the soul from the incarnation.
It’s true that there’s a lot of what comes across as pedantic theological philosophizing. However although the author places Isaac on a bit of a pedestal, later Ozick pulls the carpet (and stand) away, leaving the character and us dangling momentarily, until cutting away to something else. No biblical-like reprieve for Isaac on this occasion! And all the time set against the backdrop (“fringing’) of the fetid stagnant undercurrent. Musty as it must be aside, the decay process spews forth again in later passages renewed.
It was briefly intriguing to consider, although perhaps I just ran momentarily with a tangent, that Moses chastising the “idol” worshippers actually drove them away from their “real” spiritual underpinnings. As they say, history is written, not necessarily specifically by the victors, but by historians, and when their tale survives, it makes them victors in a sense. (The pen is mightier than the sword.)
Later the author, expressed through the (looong note, goes off on another tangent himself . . . It seems to me that, if man is the exception to some rule, then there may be an exception to the exception, as in I before e, except . . . except . . . just except it 😁. Which is exactly what Isaac is hoping for. Rather vulgarly going about it, yet Isaac ends ups ensnared in some faeirie-land fantasy. These episodes roll along in the muck for several more ensuing pages before the last twist of the screw.
Remember the prologue, thus his stoney soul, so set in stone, rejects these changes. Spirit is liberated from body, but, jarringly, the essence is found to remain in the remains after all. “To them their bodies are holy.” A withered spirit would have sung dirges until the end of time of matter, but now no longer matters. Where does that leave us and the narrator, let alone Sheindel and the seven dwarves, just kidding, asleep at the wheel. Who really knows?
This was a rather gripping tale, which held me to my seat (sitzfleish) with brief interludes, and left me thoughtful, even though I’m not sure what the author was really trying to get across. What more can one ask for?