A father; a husband; a lover; a friend; a rabbi. This is the story about
the making of a modern rabbi, his coming of age, and how he finds his
place in in a confused and confusing world.
Michael Kind is raised in the Jewish cauldron of 1920s New York,
familiar with the stresses and materialism of metropolitan life. Turning
to the ancient set of ethics of his Orthodox grandfather, with a modern
twist, he becomes a Reform rabbi. As insecure and sexually needy as any
other young male, he serves as a circuit-rider rabbi in the Ozarks, and
then as a temple rabbi in the racially ugly South, in a San Francisco
suburb, in a Pennsylvania college town, and, finally, in a New England
community west of Boston. Along the way, he falls deeply in love with
and marries the daughter of a Congregational minister; she converts to
Judaism and they have two complex, interesting children. Noah Gordon's
picture of a brilliant and talented religious counselor - who at times
is as bereft and uncertain as any of his congregants - is a deeply
moving and very satisfying novel.