Strassberg presents a brief fantasy novella about discussions in a psychiatric hospital between two men who resemble Jesus Christ and Santa Claus.
In this short, somewhat whimsical tale, two very different men meet in a ward for patients with mental illness: a short Jewish man named Josh with a brown beard, and Nick,a big-bellied fellow with white whiskers. Josh was just committed by paramedics because he was found wandering in traffic after breaking up with his boyfriend; Nick is the former CEO of Myra Toys who used to travel frequently on business (“I basically lived my life out of a big red sack,” he says, in one of Strassberg’s many winks at the reader. “I must have carried that bag over my shoulder forever”). Both men find themselves in the ward during the Christmas season, and they initially find themselves in conflict as they fall into arguments about metaphysics in the common rooms. Josh is spiritual and empathetic, assuring Nick that “God doesn’t want our independence; he wants our interdependence.” Nick, guessing that Josh is an unhoused person, is sharply intolerant at first: “I know if you’ve been bad or good, and you’ve all been bad,” he rumbles. “My tax dollars go to pay for the land where you illegally squat in your tents.” In the slow, skillful development of the relationship between these two men, Strassberg plays on the initial gimmick of having Jesus and Santa analogues meet, and steadily broadens the story into a more ambitious meeting of the minds, drawing on elements of philosophy. Nick is predictably jolly, but Strassberg’s greatest creation is Josh, who prays only for “an ordinary mortal life” and is the source of most of this slim book’s most memorable passages: “Perfection is the enemy of the good, but for me, I’ve met perfection,” he complains at one point. “And perfection has met me and just won’t leave me alone.” Very little happens in the book other than these verbal encounters, but readers will be too interested to notice.
An intense novella of ideas that looks into the heart of faith and generosity.