Dancing with Einstein by Kate Wenner
In this haunting and engaging novel by Kate Wenner, we meet
30-year old Marea Hoffman as she sorts out her complicated childhood and attempts
to settle into an adult life. After
graduating from Barnard and traveling the world for seven years, Marea lands in New
York City hoping to find some peace and permanence.
Marea visits four therapists: a Freudian, a Jungian, a
political psychologist, and a general psychotherapist. Wenner’s one-woman jury on
the efficacy of therapy does not reach a verdict, but it is fascinating to
observe the process. That Marea has carried the weight of her family’s burden
is never in doubt by any of her therapists. The therapists offer Marea four approaches for excavating her life and
she in turn reveals four different versions of herself. Through the combination of these experiences
and her openness to self-analysis, Marea begins to engage and understand the
feelings she has spent her life avoiding.
When Marea was twelve years old, Jonas, her scientist father, died in a
car crash after he dropped her off at school. Uncertainty lurks in Marcea’s mind. Was it an
accident or suicide? She attempts to study that ride to school with her kind
and gentle father frame by frame, like watching a film in slow motion. She also remembers the tension and fighting in
her family’s home in Princeton, New Jersey where her father now worked after
designing the detonators for the nuclear bomb dropped at Hiroshima. Marcea’s
mother was a committed Quaker and opposed his involvement in such violent
pursuits.
Edward Teller and Robert Oppenheim make cameo appearances as
they wrestle with the moral implications of their destructive creation. A light
moment in an otherwise heavy life is when Jonas’s new colleague, Albert
Einstein, shares Sunday dinner with the Hoffman family. On those evenings there
is joy, music, and lightness in the Hoffman home.
Marea is a sensitive young girl who has recurring nightmares
about nuclear holocaust. Or is she dreaming a vision of her father’s trauma? Her Dad speaks little of his life in Vienna,
but one day at their Quaker meeting he stands and says, “I do what you all
despise me for – because God made both good and evil. You ridiculous people who do not believe that
the Russians are our enemies will go to your slaughter like sheep, like my own
father and mother, both murdered for the crime of being Jews.” Jonas does not seek to hurt people by participating in the country's nuclear program. He simply
believes Einstein and his wife are naïve to the evils of the world.
After a seven-year absence, Marea returns to visit her
mother in Princeton. In attempting to
reconnect with her only child, Ginny Hoffman shares her husband’s letters with Marea,
which leads to a new level of understanding between the mother and daughter. This
adds another dimension to the forces shaping Marea, but one that is less well
developed and thus less convincing.
Wenner’s novel is dark, compelling, and fascinating. How could
it not be? She explores both the moral musings of scientists about the development
and use of the atomic bomb and the varied and complex approaches of psychologists in
understanding the human psyche. An excellent read.