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LIGHT FELL by Evan Fallenberg

LIGHT FELL

by Evan Fallenberg

Pub Date: Jan. 1st, 2008
ISBN: 978-1-56947-467-9
Publisher: Soho

Love between men—fathers and sons, as well as lovers—binds a sensitive first novel of family reconciliation.

Israeli academic Joseph Licht, married with five sons, is shocked to encounter a kindred soul when he meets “young Torah genius” Rabbi Yoel Rosenzweig. The intensity of their love affair compels Licht to forsake his wife Rebecca and their children at the moshav and move to a small apartment in Tel Aviv. But almost immediately Yoel commits suicide. These facts are 20 years in the past when the book opens, on Licht’s 50th birthday, as he prepares a meal to which his five sons are invited, coming together for the first time in two decades. Licht has weathered many difficult years since Yoel’s death, finally finding happiness with rich Pepe, a crude (but loving) hedonist, in contrast with Yoel’s eloquent intellectualism. The father’s departure affected his sons differently—Ethan, the army officer, learned to take responsibility early, while Gideon, the ultra-Orthodox Jew, rejects his father’s homosexuality as the sin of all sins. After the elaborate meal, Licht unburdens himself, offering the boys his side of the story. Angry eldest son Daniel counters with his account of saving Rebecca from a suicide attempt. But the next day brings a confession, a paternal reprimand, a long-lost suicide note and finally a frank conversation with Daniel that reopens the door to Licht’s role in his family’s life.

Intelligent craftsmanship confined within a theatrical, excessively tidy format.