(It
should be noted that one does not need to be Jewish to
enjoy Roth. This reviewer can vouch for that and indeed
many Jews are more than unhappy with the image they feel
he gives to his co'religionists, especially given the
onanist fixations of Portnoy or the many sexual episodes
related in Roth's books which sometimes, it has to be
said, cross the line into the gratuitous.)
The
historical speculation of Roth's novel is that the German'American
aviator Charles Lindbergh gains nomination to the White
House by the Republican party in the pivotal year of 1940.
This of course is not good news for a young but hyper'alert
Jewish boy as Washington lurches sharply away from London
and drifts gradually towards sympathy with Berlin.
Roth's book sketches out the imagined actions of a cast
of real life figures: Lindbergh, Franklin Roosevelt, Henry
Ford, and Fiorello LaGuardia, as well as figures less
well known in Australia such as press and radio figure
Walter Winchell, and Catholic priest and broadcaster Charles
Coughlin, both figures about whom the curious can and
should learn a lot of with little effort via the world
wide web.
Roth's
imagination builds with some faithfulness on their actual
deeds of the period and his endnotes contain potted biographies
of these figures to assure the reader that his speculation,
while just that, is not reckless.
In
historical reality, Lindbergh's opposition to American
involvement in the fight against Nazism was a matter of
public record, and he attributed the pre'Pearl Harbour
push for war to Roosevelt, to British agents, and to the
Jewish influence in film and radio. (An oft overlooked
historical fact is that the US did not ultimately declare
war on Germany, but that Hitler 'a man who we can safely
say was at times irrational' declared war on the USA a
few days after Pearl Harbour despite having no treaty
obligation to do so, making Lindbergh's position embarrassingly
redundant. As a further aside, knowledge of Hitler's treaty
obligations and for that matter his poor observance of
them more than deflates the sinister idea that Roosevelt
knew in advance of the Japanese ambush in Hawaii but kept
mum in order to excuse America's entry into the war in
Europe.)
The
strength of any work of fiction, and perhaps more so in
the case of historical fiction, is the degree to which
the reader is led not to question the believability of
the events portrayed. That people typically do not walk
out of one of George Lucas or Steven Spielberg's fantasies
contemptuously snorting :As if!: is a testament to their
storytelling craft. Roth, by dealing with known people
and observable facts, sets himself a credibility hurdle
possibly higher than that required for one to digest interplanetary
battles or alien houseguests.
Any
reading of this book leads inevitably to the question:
Is the case of a pro'Nazi White House believable under
the unavoidable acid test of hindsight. Was such a scenario
possible?
A
very scientific knowledge of American institutions might
lead to a 'no' answer, but Roth understands the German'Jewish
experience of the 1930's and the creeping nature of the
tragedy. The passage of events brings to mind the fabled
boiling frog: a frog dropped into hot water will immediately
leap out of it, one placed in cold water which is brought
to the boil never reacts and is of course ultimately cooked.
Such
was the gradual deterioration of the Jewish status in
Europe, and Roth imagines it as happening in the USA.
The
Weimar constitution, a relatively educated public, certainly
more educated than Britain, and a centuries old Germanic
intellectual tradition did not save Germany's Jews so
why not speculate that similar conditions might not save
Jewish Americans? Roth further harnesses such subtleties
as the potential campaigning potency of air travel in
a pre'television setting. Hitler was able to campaign
and cajole several cities in a day by flying, as did Churchill
up to a point, and Roth speculates as to how much more
powerful the same method might be when the candidate is
already famous as a daring aviator and doing his own flying!
Roth
is surefooted when he imagines the dialogue of the American
Jews who balance their assimilation and commitment to
America with the threatening presence in the White House:
his characters are stunned that people they know could
even think of fleeing to Canada to avoid what the future
might hold. We know that similar rhetoric abounded in
Germany after 1933.
Roth
constructs a series of events that are arguably plausible
in the abstract; but this is not the same as saying that
he successfully pulls it off in the concrete. It might
be said that a 'highish' level of knowledge and interest
in the politics of the period in question might lead to
a higher threshold of credulousness which Roth probably
fails to clear.
This
though is not the only benchmark for the book. Judging
it against his other works it does not fare well. While
he has probably wisely left sex out of this novel he seems
to have left comedy out of it as well. The blending of
comedy and the Jewish Holocaust is perhaps Mel Brooks'
cup of tea and no one else's, so the straightness of Roth's
book is not a criticism as such. It is simply an observation
that a normally key reason for reading Roth in the first
place is not there in this instance. Comparing "The Plot
Against America" to his other non'comic triumphs is perhaps
more to the point, and again sadly this latest novel falls
short.
:I
Married a Communist: explores personal events in the context
of an historical episode and is probably the closest in
tone to this book but it is far superior. :The Human Stain:
is not Roth's best but it is still very good: better than
this one. :American Pastoral: is mostly without the sex
and comedy of much of his work but it is still entirely
engrossing, its characters perfectly drawn, expertly rounded
and realised.
Roth's
book is a disappointment only by his own standards. You
will read praise for it elsewhere because the man's deserved
reputation precedes him and American critics seem more
prone to champion their own than to tear down a winner.
The fact is that the writer is a gem, some say the best
American writer since World War Two. If you have not read
the sometimes infantile yet still perfect :Portnoy's Complaint:
then you are wasting your life. Many more triumphs follow,
especially in the last dozen years, but :The Plot Against
America: is not quite one of them.
If
World War Two 'what if?' books interest you, then you
might well enjoy the deservedly popular thriller :Fatherland:
by Robert Harris. If you seek a low farce book version
of Woody Allen, then Roth has it elsewhere in spades.
This
latest book remains worth a read for curious Roth aficionados
and indeed as an excellent reminder of who was saying
what in one of the more intoxicating periods of modern
history.
:The
Plot Against America: is a good book. But it is not one
of the great Roths.
(Note
that no plot has been revealed in this review which can
not be gleaned in the first paragraph of this novel.)