Dancing With Einstein: A Novel
by
Kate Wenner
Order:
USA
Can
Scribner, 2004 (2004)
Hardcover
Reviewed by J. A. Kaszuba Locke
I
n
Dancing With Einstein
, Kate Wenner gives us beautifully written prose, as in '
trees are lit by a low-angled sun ... A blue heron stands perfectly balanced on one leg ... the morning is cool, full of promise
'. It's a philosophical, passionate and compassionate drama revolving around four memorable characters.
S
cientist Jonas Hoffman is engaged with the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos. The fact that his wife Virginia Pell Hoffman is a strong pacifist, puts their marriage at odds. Their daughter Marea shows promise as a budding scientist. As a child, she remembers her loving father telling her that '
a scientist sees more when she looks at the world with love.
' Marea adopts Albert Einstein, a friend of the family, as '
Grandpa Albert
'.
H
er father, Jonas Hoffman was born in Vienna, of Jewish parents. After Jonas was sent to the United States as a student of science, his parents were killed during the Holocaust. Jonas's father raised him '
to believe in the enlightenment of humankind through science.
' In the years following Jonas's death in a car crash, and blaming her mother for her parents' failing relationship, Marea abandons her home in Princetown, New Jersey. She questions whether Jonas's death was an accident or suicide.
A
fter seven years of wandering three continents, Marea returns to New York City at the age of thirty, haunted by vivid dreams. Marea engages four therapists, telling each a different part of her life, and each one offers a different approach to her healing. During a hiatus in therapy, Marea, finally goes home again, where Virginia gives Jonas's journal to her daughter. The journal's first entry is '
Compania Hill, July 16, 1945
', the date of Marea's birth. It plays a large part in Marea's self-search. Before her return to New York, Marea's anger towards her mother turns to compassion, but she is not yet able to give her mother love.
I
am in awe of this author's ability to deliver such a unique and hauntingly beautiful account. Kate Wenner's
Dancing With Einstein
is a compelling story infused with suffering, pain, and ultimately a presence of joy. I recommend it as an ideal novel for a book club discussion.
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