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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=90TT1244>
<title>
May 14, 1990: Ringmaster
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
May 14, 1990 Sakharov Memoirs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 90
Ringmaster
</hdr>
<body>
<qt>
<l>SOLOMON GURSKY WAS HERE</l>
<l>by Mordecai Richler</l>
<l>Knopf; 413 pages; $19.95</l>
</qt>
<p> "How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land?"
inquires the psalmist. With reverence, replies Mordecai
Richler. Plus a few gags ("What's black and white and brown and
looks good on a lawyer?" "A Doberman"); a couple of
philosophical digressions ("Liquor, once you're hooked on it,
is a hard habit to break. Like God, Henry thought..."); some
manic riffs on fame ("That dumbbell the Duke of Windsor he
threw in the sponge for a tart. You want the Duke and Duchess
for a charity ball, you rent them like a tux from Tip-Top");
and the most furiously original cast of buccaneers,
entrepreneurs, intellectuals and whackos north of Niagara
Falls.
</p>
<p> First among them is Moses Berger, a former academic who
seems to regard the slogan DRINK CANADA DRY as a moral
imperative. As a child in Montreal, he is introduced to a local
clan of mysterious origin and unlimited wealth. Forty years
later, Berger finally discards alcohol for a fresh obsession:
writing the saga of the strange and indomitable Gurskys.
</p>
<p> Ephraim Gursky begins it all in the 19th century. The
fugitive from Minsk becomes the thief of London and the
prisoner of Newgate. Deported, he turns into the con man of the
Klondike. This ultimate survivor begets 27 unacknowledged
offspring, plus Aaron, who begets the predatory Bernard and the
doomed and mysterious Solomon. The brothers beget a liquor
business that makes them the intimates of gangsters during
Prohibition and the cynosure of politicians ever after. Their
descendants become various refractions of the founder: vulgar,
sensitive, avaricious, undirected, lost.
</p>
<p> But Solomon Gursky Was Here is far more than family saga.
On the journey from rawhide to velvet, the Gurskys participate
in nearly every event of global importance, from Arctic
exploration to the rescue at Entebbe, from Mao's Long March to
Nixon's Watergate. Despite the obvious temptations, Richler
never reduces them to mere symbols of Jewish persistence or the
Canadian past. Each member of his large and hilarious cast has
three dimensions and at least two faces.
</p>
<p> Then again, so does the author. Throughout a bright literary
career--most notably in St. Urbain's Horseman and Joshua Then
and Now--Canadian novelist Richler has employed a unique
blend of humor, history and myth. Here his mixture is richer
and darker than before. He is a ringmaster, making his
performers do dazzling backflips without missing a beat. At the
same time he is a moralist, recoiling from those who would
sentimentalize the Holocaust or make power a sacrament. In the
middle of the journey, Bernard Gursky seeks a biographer. "For
this job," he booms, "I don't want a Canadian. I want the best."
He got both.
</p>
<p>By Stefan Kanfer.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>