cover image Two for the Devil

Two for the Devil

Allen Hoffman. Abbeville Press, $24.95 (254pp) ISBN 978-0-7892-0397-7

The third volume in Hoffman's Small World series (after Big League Dreams) implicitly emphasizes the trilogy's theme: that the far-flung former residents of the tiny Polish shetl of Krimsk are forever connected via their religion, their shared past and the intuition of the Krimsker rebbe. When a letter written by the rebbe in St. Louis is received in Moscow on Rosh Hashanah, 1936, it is a death warrant for Grisha Shwartzman, the character in Small Worlds who rescued the Torah from the burning synagogue and was rewarded with marriage to the rebbe's daughter. The then-idealistic Grisha returned to Russia and an unquestioning devotion to the Revolution. Now an NKVD colonel in the Lubyanka secret police prison, Grisha finds himself, on the first day of the Jewish New Year, brought to judgment for the crimes he has committed in Stalin's name. Grisha's painful moral awakening is a mordant depiction of a man without scruples in a society where morality and truth have been subverted by political tyranny. In the book's second section, a man being deported from the Warsaw ghetto on Yom Kippur, 1942, has another terrifying problem: he can't remember his name, though he can remember having been expelled from Krimsk as a heretic. When he meets another former resident of Krimsk, a gentle giant who needs protection, Yechiel Katzman's memory spontaneously returns, and the rebbe's prophecy that he would never leave Krimsk proves true. Unlike its two predecessors, this is an unrelievedly dark and painful work, its gallows humor swallowed in the tragic enormity of the events it describes. The tortured examination of Talmudic logic and Communist illogic may be more erudite and specific than readers desire. Yet the overriding message of these linked novellas is redemptive. Though the ""two devils,"" Stalin and Hitler, claim two more lives, the morality and humanistic principles of Judaism prevail in an implied rebirth of the children of Israel. Editor, Sally Arteseros. (Sept.)