Fic­tion

Reme­dies

Kate Ledger
  • Review
By – December 22, 2011

Med­ical writer Kate Ledger’s first nov­el is a flat-out good read. 

Simon Bear, an earnest sub­ur­ban physi­cian, and his wife, Emi­ly, a pub­lic rela­tions exec­u­tive, live in a land­marked house out­side of Bal­ti­more. At first, Bear is a bore. He is flighty and pompous and yet, because he gen­uine­ly wish­es to help peo­ple and has an inno­v­a­tive spir­it, he’s both repel­lant and com­pelling. Emi­ly is ini­tial­ly like­able but her self­ish behav­ior near­ly leads to dire con­se­quences. The death of the couple’s first child many years ago still haunts them both, final­ly dri­ving them to act out in sur­pris­ing ways. 

As a review­er, I was mys­ti­fied for most of the book as to why Reme­dies would be of inter­est to a Jew­ish audi­ence. The Bears iden­ti­fy them­selves vague­ly as Reform Jews but have lit­tle knowl­edge of or inter­est in Jew­ish cul­ture or reli­gion. It is near the end of the nov­el, when Simon is in cri­sis and finds him­self with neigh­bors at a tem­ple on Kol Nidre, that the moment occurs for both char­ac­ter and read­er. Simon looks around and real­izes how arro­gant he is to assume that his sins are worse than any­one else’s, and there­fore unfor­giv­able. Hold­ing onto guilt for years and years has kept him from liv­ing hon­est­ly. He sees that the pow­er of Yom Kip­pur is the chance it offers for annu­al renew­al. He can choose not to dwell on the same old things and instead embrace his fam­i­ly, his friends, and his future. 

Unfor­tu­nate­ly the end­ing, while spir­i­tu­al­ly affirm­ing, doesn’t quite hang togeth­er with the rest of the sto­ry, where reli­gion is almost entire­ly absent. The Kol Nidre moment, while beau­ti­ful and mov­ing, is a bit jar­ring, as if cut and past­ed in. At the same time, it allows us to under­stand Simon and Emi­ly, and maybe our­selves, a bit more.

Sara Leopold Spin­nell is a co-founder of Trav​elu​jah​.com, a web­site that pro­motes Chris­t­ian trav­el to Israel. She lives in New York City with her hus­band and two children.

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