The Latecomer: A Novel
4/5
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Identity
Family Dynamics
Self-Discovery
Personal Growth
College Life
Fish Out of Water
Family Secrets
Hidden Identity
Forbidden Love
Dysfunctional Family
Opposites Attract
Redemption
Journey of Self-Discovery
Culture Clash
Self-Made Man
Family Relationships
Sibling Relationships
Friendship
Parent-Child Relationships
Sibling Rivalry
About this ebook
*A New York Times Notable Book of 2022*
*A Washington Post Notable Work of Fiction*
*An NPR Best Book of the Year*
*A New Yorker Best Book of 2022*
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Plot, Jean Hanff Korelitz’s The Latecomer is a layered and immersive literary novel about three siblings, desperate to escape one another, and the upending of their family by the late arrival of a fourth.
The Latecomer follows the story of the wealthy, New York City-based Oppenheimer family, from the first meeting of parents Salo and Johanna, under tragic circumstances, to their triplets born during the early days of IVF. As children, the three siblings – Harrison, Lewyn, and Sally – feel no strong familial bond and cannot wait to go their separate ways, even as their father becomes more distanced and their mother more desperate. When the triplets leave for college, Johanna, faced with being truly alone, makes the decision to have a fourth child. What role will the “latecomer” play in this fractured family?
A complex novel that builds slowly and deliberately, The Latecomer touches on the topics of grief and guilt, generational trauma, privilege and race, traditions and religion, and family dynamics. It is a profound and witty family story from an accomplished author, known for the depth of her character studies, expertly woven storylines, and plot twists.
Jean Hanff Korelitz
Jean Hanff Korelitz is the New York Times bestselling author of the novels The Plot, The Latecomer, You Should Have Known (which aired on HBO as The Undoing, starring Nicole Kidman, Hugh Grant, and Donald Sutherland), Admission (adapted as a film starring Tina Fey), The Devil and Webster, The White Rose, The Sabbathday River and A Jury of Her Peers, as well as Interference Powder, a novel for children. Her company BOOKTHEWRITER hosts Pop-Up Book Groups in which small groups of readers discuss new books with their authors. She lives in New York City with her husband, Irish poet Paul Muldoon.
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Reviews for The Latecomer
186 ratings24 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It captured so much of what goes on in families in one very dysfunctional family. Loved it!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This novel follows the fortunes of the Oppenheimers, a wealthy and dysfunctional New York Jewish family. It is complex, but still a very compelling story that keeps those pages turning right up to the end -- I really wanted to know what happened next. The characterization is great; these people really come alive. Very well written, a pleasure to read. The first two thirds of the book shows us the dysfunctional part, but things improve in the final third, where mysteries are solved and relationships repaired. The happy ending may seem a bit improbable, given the people involved, but it still made me happy. Good book.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I recently read The Plot by Korelitz so I thought I would read this though it was not a mystery thriller.. What it is is a family saga with a very John Irving and Jonathan Franzen feel to it. It follows a dysfunctional family as its moves through the late 20th and early 21st century. Salo Oppenheimer is the driver of a car that has an accident that kills his girl friend and best friend. This accident and his reaction to it defines him. He is part of of a wealthy New York family. Johanna his wife devotes herself to him and longs for a family. After years of trying through using in vitro they are able to have not one but 3 children(triplets). Harrison, Llewyn, and Sally who grow up as individuals with little need or desire to connect with other. Johanna trys to pull them together but it doesn't happen and Salo always is distant as he delves into art and collecting. This is the framework of a story that touches on so many different things such as religion, education, art, infidelity, religion, politics etc. It is very well written and delves deeply into each character. The twist is the "latecomer", Phoebe who is the 4th embryo who Johanna has carried by surrogate and is born 18 years after the triplets when they are leaving home for college. Ultimately she is the one that moves the story forward to an interesting conclusion. This is a 440 page novel with small print that I finished in 2 days. I strongly recommend this book if you like family drama. If you like mystery/thrillers then try her previous book "The Plot".
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I agree with other reviewers - I questioned why was it this long, should I keep going, why couldn't a look away from this trainwreck of a "family". I'm glad I stayed. Did I like the characters, not really. Did they grow on me, yes. Could I empathise with them, yes. Well written, good character development and well plotted.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I didn't like this at first, the narrative voice seemed kind of removed. But as I read further, I got into the plot. (although parts were a bit too melodramatic) and toward the end you understand the reason for the narrative voice. It's about triplets, born to a wealthy Jewish family in New York, through IVF, and 18 years later, their sister, who was born through an embryo frozen at the same time. So an interesting concept, and parts are very funny. Overall, a book about family ties forged through trauma and dishonesty. But there is a hopefulness here also, and I appreciated that the author doesn't take herself or her subjects too seriously.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I was hopeful when I heard about this book and looking forward to reading it, but it was a bit of a letdown. I almost didn't finish reading it. It was very slow going for me and the story didn't seem to pick up as much as I was hoping it would.
This story is quite sad in parts and focuses a lot on the experiences of this family trying to live their life and then discovering as they've grown up that they've grown apart except then they realize they were never really that close, to begin with, it seems. The mother and father meet and marry in not the most ideal circumstances each with their own baggage that seems to permeate through everything It appears and then the mother is the one who wants children while it seems like the father isn't entirely sure but ends up going along with it. There is a bit discussed rather frankly about intimacy and infertility. They end up having triplets, but the 3 siblings are like strangers to each other as well as to the parents and the parents to each other. It's like all the family members are islands unto themselves floating apart and living life apart from each other even though they've grown up in the same house and whatnot. It was rather sad, strange, and a bit depressing as I read about their experiences and how they felt like strangers to each other. Toward the end of the book, things do change a bit for the better though with the coming of the last child into the family.
Reading this can be a bit hard or triggering in parts in regards to infertility or challenging family relationships, situations, and such. There is some wording and language used when discussing intimacy, infertility, and such that is a bit blunt or maybe a bit weird/off-putting for some as well.
Thanks to Celadon Books and NetGalley for letting me read and review this story. All thoughts and opinions are my own. #TheLatecomerBook #CeladonReads - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5So, this is a very long book and many times I asked myself if I should just stop reading it. Not normally a question I ever ask myself!!! If I don't like a book, I just stop reading it and also I hardly ever dislike a book that I choose to read! But, it kept pulling me back in and on page 313, I finally understood the long intro (for lack of a better word) and could hardly stand to read what was happening! I put the book down several times, told my husband that I just didn't want to be a part of this train derailment but finally got a glass of wine and dove in! Holy moly, geez Louise, what the heck???? Anyway, I absolutely loved this book, there's more surprises along the way and just a wonderful ending!!! So, at the risk of upsetting some people who might run out of patience, (hey, I almost did ) I do highly recommend this book!!!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The funniest Passover Seder ever.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In The Latecomers by Jean Hanff Korelitz, we follow the Oppenheimer family from a tragedy in the 1970s to a tragedy in the 2000s. This is a long and enjoyable novel focused on mainly unlikeable characters, but Korelitz infuses them with humor and personality that makes them feel very real and relatable. She explores the themes of relationships and what makes a family while examining the last 30 or so years of American culture.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5UNCLE! made it to page 200 and I am out. I am just bored. so bored. I liked the depiction of art, and reactions to art from Salo and Sally, but they are a small part of a sprawling story and otherwise I was just perpetually bored while reading this. I had to force myself to return. I could not see a reason to spend another 8 hours or so trudging through this. There was no potential payoff. Korelitz's writing is fine, workmanlike but fine. The offhand remarks about NYC and Ithaca were super-relevant to me and smart and funny. But the people! It was not that I did not like them, actually I did sort of like Salo (the father) and two of the three triplets. (Johanna and Harrison were the only truly unlikable characters, both entirely selfish and both drawn with less dimension than the rest of the family.) I just did not care at all about the story. These are not particularly interesting characters, not particularly well drawn, all enduring the non particularly gripping processes of moving through life. I mean, I know the processes are interesting to the people moving through them, but why should I care? I guess my empathy ends where you begin to bore me. Man, I suck.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I absolutely loved Jean Hanff Korelitz's last book, The Plot, so I was very excited to get an ARC of The Latecomer from Bookish First. But it did not live up to my high expectations. The book is well written but the first two thirds are so slow. It also does not help that most of the characters are very unlikeable and don't even like each other. I did not start to really enjoy the book until the last third when the latecomer finally made her appearance and there was more character development for all the characters. Phoebe is the most developed and mature character in the book despite being the youngest sibling. The rest of the characters were all redeemed in some way by the end and I liked the relationships that developed among the siblings. I also liked Jean Hanff Korelitz's writing style and would definitely read other books by her in the future.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I picked up The Latecomer because I loved Jean Hanff Korelitz’s novel The Plot (review hopefully coming soon.) The Latecomer is not a thriller like The Plot but I liked it just as much. It asks the interesting question about how it feels to be born from the “leftover” embryos after your parents go through IVF, several years after your siblings have been born. What would your life look like if you had been one of the triplets instead of the much younger singleton? It’s also about sibling dynamics. The triplets do not get a long at all, dashing their mother’s hope that they would always be a close family. That’s one of the reasons she decided to have a fourth child, thinking it would bring everyone together.
I really enjoyed The Latecomer. I could relate to the mother wanting her children to stay close to each other and to her. I have four kids and I hope they stay close. And my youngest is nine years younger than his closest sibling so he’s kind of a latecomer as well!
Jean Hanff Korelitz is on her way to becoming one of my favorite authors. Highly recommended. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Triplets Lewyn, Sally, and Harrison are the much-wanted product of their mother's IVF. Johanna, their mother, dotes on them, but is oblivious to them as actual people. She insists that they love each other, and doesn't seem to notice that they prefer not to be in each other's company. Salo, their father, is largely uninterested (although not unloving), preferring to spend his time with his art collection, and, eventually, his mistress, until he is killed on 9/11. As the triplets are about to move out, Johanna decides that she wants one last chance at motherhood, and has the fourth embryo of the bunch implanted. Enter Pheobe, who, at 17, is the only member of the family able to see things (more or less) clearly.
After much excellent exposition setting up the family dynamic, the crux of the matter becomes apparent. The details would spoil the experience, but suffice it to say that Pheobe must overcome her siblings' old resentments and her mother's hang-ups, all formed long before she was born. Naturally, she'll uncover old secrets and learn a few things about herself along the way. But Phoebe is quite determined and not about to let her family members hide behind their usual evasive tricks.
Phoebe's narrative voice makes this book worth reading, even if, for most of the book. A strong and surprising young woman, you may find yourself wishing that she would bring her considerable talents and persistence to solve the problems in your life.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was an interesting family saga. There were four children in the Oppenheimer family proper, all born by in vitro fertilizaion/surrogate. The three oldest, Harrison, Sally and Lewin, were triplets, and they basically hated each other. The first part of the book details their growing up, and is basically the saga of a dysfunctional family.
The youngest Oppenheimer, Phoebe, was born after the triplets were basically adults. She becomes the peacemaker in the family, as she takes on the job of "reweaving the shredded fabric of our family, the figuring out what was owed whom by whom and how we were all supposed to become unstuck with one another." There is also a separate family from a long term relationship the father Salo has with another woman.
The most interesting part of the book for me was the entwining of the story of modern art into the family saga. Salo was an art collector, and had an infallible instinct for purchasing works by an artist just before they became famous. Over the years he amassed a unparalleled collection of artists such as Cy Twombly, Richard Diebenkorn, Brice Marsden, Francis Bacon, Hans Hoffman, Ed Ruscha, Agnes Martin, Alma Thomas, Ellsworth Kelly, Achilles Rizzoli and more. I had such a good time googling the (actual) works described in the book.
A good read.
3 stars
First line: "The Oppenheimer triplets--who were thought of by not a single person who knew them as the 'Oppenheimer triplets'--had been in full flight from one another as far back as their ancestral petri dish." - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5With a clever concept, following four in vitro embryos and their wealthy parents, this novel is superior in plotting and character development. The first three are two boys and a girl, born in the '80s, and the fourth stays in a freezer until twenty years later. Harrison is a cranky conservative; Sally is closeted and confused; and Lewyn, with no ambition nor ideas of what to do with his life, follows uncomfortably in the wake of the others. The amazing plot point is the triplets' complete dislike of each other and their alienation from their oblivious mother and their distracted father, who was emotionally devastated by a tragic accident during high school and is consumed with a love of modern art. The fourth child is Phoebe, born after her triplet siblings have left home, but destined to bring them together. Each voice is heard and each contributes greatly to the whole as they talk to the reader but not to each other. Highly recommended.
Quote: "It was not precisely that she made him wish to be a better man; it was more that she made him WISH he wished to be a better man." - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I had a difficult time getting into this book, mainly because none of the characters was particularly interesting or likeable, but I'm glad I kept reading it. It took a turn for the better about halfway in. The novel focuses on the Oppenheimer family. Salo, the father, was left emotionally scarred by a fatal accident in which he was the driver: the girl he was dating and his best friend were killed. After the funeral, he bonded with Johanna, the dead girl's bestie, and they eventually married. All Johanna wants is a family, but babies aren't forthcoming, and Salo seems more interested in his collection of modern art than his wife, spending much of his time in a warehouse he has filled with his prized possessions. Eventually he gives in to Johanna's plea to undergo fertility testing. After more failed attempts to get pregnant, four eggs are harvested; three are implanted into Johanna's womb, and the fourth is frozen for future use.
The triplets are born healthy, but unlike many multiples, they are not bonded and even dislike each other. About the only thing they agree on is that they hate Walden, the private progressive school where their parents have enrolled them. Harrison is the nasty-tempered intellectual who never misses an opportunity to belittle his brother Lewyn. Sally hates both of her brothers, so much so that when she and Lewyn both start their freshman year at Cornell, she informs him that she never wants to meet with or speak with him. Lewyn--well, he's just a nice, average, uninteresting guy with an inferiority complex.
While Johanna spends her time doting over her children and worrying about their dislike of one another, Salo distances himself even further from the family, delving into his art and pondering his guilt over the years-old accident--until a chance meeting with a documentary director who just happens to be the only other survivor of the accident.
So you can probably see why I was about to give up on the book at this point. I don't want to reveal exactly what changed and gave me the incentive to continue reading it, but much of it was due to the arrival of new characters and the convoluted connections between them and the members of the Oppenheimer family. And these connections led to a more positive conclusion and a more positive experience for me as a reader. Suffice it to say that a book I was ready to give up on halfway through ended up being a 4-star read. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Is it possible to be married with children and still not be a family? Johanna marries Salo after he's survived an accident in which two other people died, making him a kind of tragic figure in her eyes. And while she throws herself into caring for him, making a home and then in longing for children, Salo mainly cares about the paintings he's finding. And when, with a great deal of medical help, they end up with three infants, it doesn't draw Salo into Johanna's dream of a family, and the children themselves don't like each other, leaving home as quickly as possible and although two of the siblings end up at the same university, they simply don't acknowledge each other, with disastrous results. When Johanna is left with an empty nest and discovers something unsettling about Salo, she reacts by adding a fourth child to the mix. Raised essentially as an only child, will she be able to create a family out of these individuals who don't even like each other?
This is the story of a family, from the middle of the last century until just a few years ago. It's well-written, very well paced and a wonderful look at New York City at a specific time for a specific social caste. There's an old school feel to the character studies, even as they exist in very modern circumstances. Each character is fully explored, and the author takes time to let them spread their wings. And into this solid novel, that was so satisfying to read, there's a ton of art and while I'm generally happy with my life as it is, I'd love to be a wealthy dude in the early 1960s, just grabbing all the interesting paintings no one cared about and stashing it in the warehouse down in Red Hook, Brooklyn, that everyone is convinced will never be worth anything. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This was long, but I enjoyed every page. The triplets were deceptively sympathetic in the chapters devoted to their perspective, but then the narrative would take a step back and you would realize how oddly or badly they were behaving. There were a couple of climaxes - I found the second particularly satisfying - and a happyish ending.
Recommended. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Addictive reading of an incredibly dysfunctional family, I couldn’t put it down!
From the opening chapters to the very last page, I was completely immersed in the family’s story: mother, father, and triplets. The narrative by the, at first, unnamed sibling was strong and confident, teasing me with its foreshadowing, urging me on deeper into the Oppenheimer family drama. I was hooked by not only the story but the author’s deliberate. Engaging writing style and delivery.
The triplets initially put me off, each unpleasant in their way, but as I got their point of view and their stories came out, they won me over – even the obnoxious Harrison had his moments for me. The story is an absorbing family drama, but twists and turns in the plot floored me and kept me glued to the pages: definitely five-star surprises. However, the healing and forgiveness among family members ultimately made this such a satisfying reading experience for me. Won over to each character’s side, I was aching for their futures to work out.
With its smart and smooth writing and delivery and its fascinating plot, I recommend THE LATECOMER to readers of literary fiction, especially those who enjoy epic family dramas.
I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advanced Review Copy from the publisher through NetGalley. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5#FirstLine ~ Mom had a way of of obfuscating when anyone asked how she and our father first met.
Beautiful and thoughtful this book was one I will not soon forget. It was complicated and messy and brilliant. It was one of those books that slowly seeps in and then you realized you have been changed by it without knowing it. It was deep and special. It was so good, that it is hard to really put it into words. It was unlike many other books and that is why I loved it! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Underneath all the art and education and political stands and causes and society and social mores, The Latecomer is just about a family. A very, very, very dysfunctional family. A family with no apparent, reciprocated love whatsoever among them. No consideration, no concern of how their actions might affect any of the others, no remorse when they see the terrible hurt and humiliation they have caused. Johanna loved her husband Salo and dreamed of rescuing him emotionally from the tragedy of the automobile accident he caused and which she believed had ruined his life. In fact, ruined or not by the results of the auto accident, Johanna was little more than an afterthought to Salo. He didn’t treat her badly; he didn’t seem to care enough to treat her any way at all. He had his art and he drifted further and further away. A provider for the family but not part of it. Johanna’s other dream was to have that family, and her dream was full of vignettes of happy times together, sibling loving sibling, good natured rivalries, vacations and happy events to photograph and paste in the memory book. But the test tube triplets seem to have been born with a grudge, an inherent dislike of their siblings, and an aversion to spending any time with each other, or with their parents. Salo didn’t even seem to notice. Johanna tried time after time and method after method to bring them together, to realize her dream of that close, warm, loving family, but it was not to be.
The Latecomer, Phoebe, is the fourth baby from the test tube. The triplets – Harrison, Lewyn, and Sally - don’t even take notice of her. She’s just some stupid, pathetic idea their mother had. They don’t want the siblings they have. Why would they want another one?
The family is enmeshed in deceit. By chance, Salo meets the other survivor of the accident and embarks on a long-term affair and fathers a child, eventually deciding to leave the marriage on the same night Sally has decided to untangle the web of lies between her, Lewyn and her roommate/his girlfriend Rochelle. It’s all ugly. And sad. Very, very sad. Tragedy occurs. These tragic events would break most families, but this family is already broken. Always has been.
Jean Hanff Korelitz’s books are not light, easy reading but the reward is excellent writing and a story full of literary and real-life references, clever wordplay, and complex, deep, well-developed, intriguing characters that make you cringe at their behavior and their seemingly inexhaustible capacity to hurt, to demean, to denigrate, to ignore.
The first two-thirds of the book give us a lot of background and information about the parents and the triplets and what happened to them, or more importantly what did not happen, how their lives didn’t evolve as they might have wished. But, unfortunately, while you might work up a little sympathy for one or another character now and then, overall they are unlikable and create as much of their own hardship as what fate heaps on them. The emotion I mostly felt to this point was frustration, frustration with their behavior and frustration with the overwhelming amount of information to absorb. I began to wonder if all that art, history, politics, and social information was crucial to the story or just interesting surrounding or background material.
However, “Part Three – The Latecomer” picks up the pace and makes this book too absorbing to put down and well worth sticking with the bit of detail overload. Secrets are discovered, interactions and relationships explored and there is more than one big, satisfying reveal. Everything is neatly and skillfully explained and tied together and the ending was perfect. Unexpected but perfect. Korelitz is a very talented author whose work I always enjoy. Thanks to Celadon Books for allowing me to be a Celadon Reader and providing an advance copy of The Latecomer via NetGalley for my reading pleasure and honest review. I thoroughly enjoyed this book, recommend it without hesitation and look forward to the next read by this author. All opinions are my own.
#TheLatecomerBook #CeladonReads - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A rock in the road flips a Jeep Cherokee, killing two passengers.
A doctor performing in vitro fertilization chooses three of four embryos and triplets are born.
A man boards a plane that crashes into the World Trade Center.
Lives are changed because of chance meetings, or through unexpected encounters that speaks to them at the deepest level.
But chance is not the only thing that determines lives. Deliberate choices are made.
A young woman determines to save a man consumed by guilt and to build a close and loving family.
The triplet’s need to be rid of each other tears apart the family.
And nineteen years later, the fourth embryo is taken from the deep freeze, and is born, and grows up and endeavors to mend what has been broken.
The Latercomer arrives late in the story, after we read about Salo Oppenheimer’s accident and his marriage to Johanna; after we watch Harrison, Lewyn, and Sally grow up and make their mistakes and find what they love. It is Phoebe who unravels the family’s twisted history and she tells us the story.
These complex, amazing characters are deeply portrayed. Salo, unable to love anything but the abstract art he collects, only finding love late in his life. The delusional Johanna, whose determination to create the perfect family blinds her to the truth. The intellectual, sarcastic and driven Harrison, conned into radical politics. The gentle, ambivalent Lewyn, who finds a love of art and for Rochelle, who he can’t be honest with, and who is drawn to the certainties of a cultish religion. Sally, who early learns her father’s secret, and as Rochelle’s roommate, dissembles her truth, and who finds satisfaction rummaging through chaotic houses as an antiques ‘picker’.
From the first accident, this family is haunted by an inability to connect and love each other. To fill the gap, they turn to art or antiques or religion. Or affairs, or to family traditions that ape closeness.
The novel is rich in humor and psychological insight and political commentary. Harrison’s friend and political guide Eli Absalom Stone is a brilliant character.
It’s a slow burn of a book and I loved every page. These characters will be with me for a long while.
I received an ARC through BookishFirst in exchange for a fair and unbiased review. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5From the smoothly mysterious Forward, readers will wonder which of the designated triplets is the one writing "we did," as well is he/she the actual LATECOMER. Some may wish Mandy would return as the LATECOMER since she is the only appealing character for a long time reading.
Even readers with little interest in outlier paintings will likely do a Search to see if
Trombly actually exists. Intriguing reward there.
The momentum of the three averse to each other even as babies soon becomes a tiresome and everlasting trope, as was the mother's consuming obsession with family
unity. If she had just moved to get a life of her own, it may have inspired the others. It was also hard to believe that babies and toddlers would not draw physically and emotionally closer when needing warmth or comfort.
Stella of course merits attention, yet she never reveals why she, as a feminist documentary artist, would move to wreck a man's family.
Fortunately for the plot, her son brings redemption, if not a real explanation.
Strange too is how the brilliant Harrison came to totally reject his Walden roots.
The story picks up with Lewyn's Passover Seder!
Slowed again by Sally's improbable revenge...
The LATECOMER is definitely a page turner that, despite its length,
may keep readers going on and wanting more, even wishing that crazy old dad
had survived to join the folks on the Vineyard beach. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I love the cover of this book and here is how I see it. Three big flowers represent the triplets that were born through in-vitro fertilization. One smaller flower symbolizes their sister who was born nineteen years later. She is the "Latecomer", the remaining embryo that was not selected originally, but was decided to be brought into the family at the time when her siblings were leaving to the college.
This literary novel was about the wealthy Oppenheimer family. Johanna and Salo struggled to get pregnant. Actually, it was only Johanna as Salo was never ready to have children but he didn't argue when the doctor suggested IVF as an option. The triplets started to grow apart from the beginning. There was no connection between siblings and nor between their parents. Then one day Johanna found out about her husband having another child with different woman. That was the day she decided to use the last remaining egg that was stored for many years.
What a complicated family that was. Mother who devoted her life to her husband and their children. Father who was avoiding his family. Triplets who were desperate to escape one another. And the Latecomer, who thought she lost everything because she was not born together with the rest of her siblings.
It's a character driven and slow-pacing novel about a disconnected family and their lives. I liked how each chapter focused on a different family member. I didn't actually bond with the triplets, and neither with the parents, until I met Phoebe, the Latecomer. The last chapter was told through the perspective of the youngest Oppenheimer daughter, my favorite one. Because she is the one who will make a difference.
Thank you CeladonBooks and Goodreads Giveaway for sending this ARC.
Book preview
The Latecomer - Jean Hanff Korelitz
PART ONE
The Parents
1972–2001
Chapter One
The Horror of It All
In which Salo Oppenheimer meets a rock in the road
Mom had a way of obfuscating when anyone asked how she and our father first met. Mainly she said it was at a wedding in Oak Bluffs, to which she’d been brought as a date by the closeted brother of the groom, and there was her future husband, an usher for one of his fraternity brothers. Both factoids were perfectly true, though the broader assertion was also utterly false. Our parents had met once before, under frankly terrible circumstances, and this is why we all, eventually, understood how impossible it was for her to be truthful. It’s supposed to be a happy question—Where did you two meet?—with a happy answer, opening out to a lifetime of companionship, consequence, and progeny (in our case, lots of progeny). But when that moment dovetails with the very worst event in a young person’s life? Who wouldn’t wish to spare him, and the person innocently asking the question, and, as it happened, our mother herself? The shock. The glare of disapproval. The horror of it all.
The bald fact was that our parents met in central New Jersey, in a conservative synagogue that looked like a brutalist government building somewhere in the Eastern Bloc. The synagogue was Beth Jacob of Hamilton Township, and the terrible occasion was the funeral of a nineteen-year-old girl named Mandy Bernstein, who had died four days earlier in a car driven by her boyfriend, our father, Salo Oppenheimer. Mandy was, by every account, a vibrant young person with a glowing white smile and long dark hair, the eldest child and pride of her family (the Bernsteins of Lawrenceville, New Jersey, and Newton, Massachusetts), a Cornell sophomore and likely psychology major, and (as far as she herself was concerned) the joyfully intended future life partner of Salo Oppenheimer. Mandy Bernstein was one of two Cornell students who’d perished in the accident, the other being Salo’s friend and fraternity brother, Daniel Abraham, a kind boy who was on a first or possibly second date with the other person in the back seat. That person was still hospitalized in Ithaca. Salo alone had walked away from the wreck.
Even then, nobody blamed him. Nobody! Even in those early days, in the grief and rage of the Abraham and Bernstein families and the many friends of the two young people who were suddenly, horribly, not there, it was somehow held by all present in the synagogue (and, the following week, at the E. Bernheim and Sons Funeral Chapel in Newark, New Jersey, where Daniel Abraham would be memorialized) that Salo Oppenheimer’s brand-new Laredo had been traveling at an eminently reasonable speed down a perfectly respectable road when it hit a loose rock and—abruptly, incomprehensibly—flipped, landing on its roof, half on and half off the road. It was, in other words, at least in those houses of God, as if the hand of God itself had picked up that vehicle and dropped it back to earth. Who could explain the mystery? Who could make comprehensible the loss?
Not Salo, that was certain. He sat in the second row at his girlfriend’s funeral service, four stitches in his scalp and an Ace bandage (not even a cast!) on his left wrist, out of his mind with shock and guilt, barely taking in the stream of Mandy’s cousins and high school friends and the contingent of Bernsteins who’d made aliyah a few years earlier but were now, appallingly, here in Hamilton Township, weeping and looking at him but still: not blaming him. At least to Salo’s face, everyone seemed to be blaming … the Jeep.
Why the Jeep? Why, why, the Jeep? He’d had his choice of cars, and in fact had been on the point of purchasing a sparkling gray 300-D from Mercedes-Benz of Manhattan when his grandmother phoned his mother to say that it was a disgrace for any Jew to drive a Mercedes, and was Salo so removed from his own Jewishness, from the fact and fate of his own martyred ancestor Joseph Oppenheimer (Goebbels’s own Jud Süss!) that he did not understand the company had used concentration camp labor to build armaments and airplane engines? In fact, the answer to that was: yes, as Salo’s Jewishness was not particularly acute, either in the religious or, at the age of nineteen, all that much in the historical sense. Certainly he was well aware of the mythic Jud Süss—court Jew
to the Duke of Wurttemberg in the 1730s, convicted of a bouquet of fictional crimes when his boss died suddenly, and executed, his corpse hung in a gibbet for six years outside of Stuttgart—but that all felt so very eighteenth century, and Salo was a young man fresh out of the 1960s, when the entire culture had coalesced around his own generation’s youth and vigor and renunciation of the past. Besides, he’d really, really liked that Benz a lot, its sleek shape and leather seats, the vaguely European sophistication he’d felt sitting behind the wheel. After that phone call, though, it was a moot issue, and some instinct had sent him in the opposite direction: from the Nazi Mercedes-Benz company to that perfectly all-American anti-Semite Henry Ford.
Later, the instability of those 1970s Jeeps would become something of a cliché, but at that time the notion of a rugged, gritty 4x4 driving machine, suggestive of the Manifest Destiny frontier, was one of capability, not compromise. And if Salo Oppenheimer, in the market for his very first car, was willing to forgo the interior luxuries of, say, an uber-German automobile with a long company tradition of sophisticated design (alongside the slave labor), then surely it would only be for the enhanced ability to drive the wild roads surrounding Ithaca, his college town, even in its insane winter months. A Jeep for gorges and icy highways! A Jeep for the back roads of upstate New York! A Jeep for weekend jaunts with buddies and girlfriends, who didn’t even, that fateful Saturday morning, have a precise destination in mind.
In the aftermath, he had no recollection of the rock in the road, or the sickening arc through the air, bright winter sun streaming directly into his eyes. His only impressions would be the shriek of crushing metal—that absurd sardine-tin roof, crumpling on impact—and the open-mouthed surprise of Mandy Bernstein, whose sweet, freckle-dusted nose he had thought adorable, instantly, the first time he saw her at a reception for new Jewish freshmen. Mandy was made of joy, perpetually on the verge of laughter, close to her parents and younger sisters back in New Jersey (if she wasn’t in her room, she was likely in the phone booth down the corridor in Balch Hall, coaxing Lisa or Cynthia through some high school social maze or perceived parental injustice) and to her cousins in Newton, the mother ship of the Bernstein family. She liked to wear her hair in a high ponytail, sometimes with a red bandana wrapped around it (a fashion she’d picked up on a kibbutz she’d visited one summer during high school), and she rotated three pairs of well-loved bell bottoms that she was perpetually embroidering: butterflies, rainbows, a rendering of the family poodle, Poochkin, in lavender. By December of their freshman year they were dating,
which basically meant that Salo took her out to football games and walked her home to her dorm when the library closed. They sampled the brand-new and exotic Moosewood restaurant downtown for something called tofu
and went for numerous Hot Truck runs on the way back to their North Campus dorms. Mandy was fond of the pizza subs.
He’d brought her home only once, when she was visiting the city to interview for a summer internship with UJA (an internship she would indeed be offered, in a letter that arrived one week after the accident). That introduction had gone well, despite the Bernsteins’ obvious lack of Our Crowdliness (and despite the fact that Selda Oppenheimer plainly harbored hopes of a Sachs, a Schiff, or even a Warburg for her only son); Mandy was simply that delightful, that charming and powerfully kind, and that in love—pure, clear, and very obvious love—with Salo Oppenheimer. She loved his brain and his manners and his spindly body, tall and frail, devoid of musculature. She loved a goodness she saw in him, which Salo—quite honestly—had never pretended to see in himself. It was not precisely true that she made him wish to be a better man; it was more true that she made him wish he wished to be a better man. At the time, that felt like enough.
He hadn’t asked her to marry him. They weren’t engaged, though later he was deliberately vague on this issue, because he knew it would make a big difference to Mandy’s parents; the distance between She was a wonderful girl, someone any guy would have been lucky to date
and She was the love of my life, and I was on the point of proposing to her
felt vast, and our father opted (correctly) to let her parents believe whatever might help them bear the pain. That awful winter and spring, and for the next several years, he let the Bernsteins enfold him into their grief as Mandy’s intended: future fiancé, husband, and father of the children she would never have. Then he married Johanna Hirsch, their daughter’s Lawrence High schoolmate, and all contact abruptly ceased.
Mandy Bernstein had been Johanna’s Big Sister, not literally but within the local chapter of the B’nai B’rith Girls. This was a position she had taken seriously, leaving surprise gift baskets (bagels and cream cheese, chocolate-chip cookies) on the doorstep of the Hirsch home when she knew Johanna was studying for a test, and showing up to help out on Johanna’s service projects, like the roadside car wash to benefit the Hebrew nursing home recreation fund or the friendship letters to children in Israel. The Sisters
had all been randomly assigned, but Johanna was ecstatic to find she’d been paired with the popular and pretty Mandy Bernstein. Mandy Bernstein! A person she would not have dared solicit for friendship in the halls of their teeming New Jersey high school, where a year’s difference in age meant everything, and perceived deficits in looks, wealth, and cool meant everything else.
Johanna was one of dozens of young women at the funeral that day, each and every one of them sincerely, personally in mourning. The identity of the young man with the bandaged wrist had been freely exchanged among them, and it would be fair to say that Salo Oppenheimer was the object of a certain romantic fascination. How must he feel? So young himself, and already responsible for the deaths of two others, just as young? How would he survive the loss of his own beloved Mandy, this glowing, clever (Ivy League!) girl, the jewel of her family, school, and town? Possibly, Johanna was not the only person in the jammed pews of Temple Beth Jacob wondering what kind of person it might ultimately take to draw this devastated Salo Oppenheimer from his eternal vortex of guilt and pain. Possibly she was not the only one imagining the great love and compassion necessary to bring Salo Oppenheimer back to life.
Our mother wasn’t remarkable like Mandy Bernstein. She was an ordinary girl from a family so average and undistinguished that she cringed at their inadequacies and then again at her own disloyalty. Her father was an accountant who worked for the famous Lawrenceville boarding school, a job he’d taken so that Johanna’s younger brother, our uncle Bobby, might possibly be granted admission (Lawrenceville was still several years away from coeducation, not that our grandfather had ever given a thought to opportunities, educational or otherwise, for his female children). Lawrenceville, and the opportunities it represented, were completely lost on our uncle Bobby, who was a committed anti-intellectual (which you could still be at Lawrenceville in the ’70s) and pot dealer (which you could not be, at least not if you were caught, as Bobby certainly was). After a disastrous freshman year he would transfer to Lawrence High where his sisters were already in situ, and there he would add scores of new clients to his thriving business. (In the long run, our uncle’s entrepreneurial instincts were by no means disadvantageous. By the early 1990s he was a real estate developer with a McMansion of his own in Point Pleasant. By then, he had retired from acquiring pot for other people, and one day would even—wonder of wonders!—send a child of his own to Lawrenceville.) Phil Hirsch, our grandfather, was certainly humiliated by the way things had turned out, but he still remained at the school until his retirement; his way, perhaps, of saving face.
As far as our mother was concerned, her parents had completely missed the true star of the Hirsch family, which was not Bobby and certainly not herself. Our aunt Debbie, the oldest of the three siblings, was very smart and also very ambitious, in the subdued manner of girls coming of age with the Second Wave in the ’70s, all too aware of the fact that doors were opening and that she was going to be allowed—if not exactly encouraged—to walk through them. Debbie opted for a safe (though quietly roiling) Mount Holyoke for college, and afterward a retail training program at Macy’s, chosen for no other reason than the fact that she still got a little trill of excitement from department stores. That trill wouldn’t last long, not once she was spending her days unpacking boxes and checking inventory, but things clicked into place as she realized how many ideas she had about adjusting chains of command to streamline operations. Her supervisors, shockingly enough, were not interested in Debbie Hirsch’s ideas, so she went to business school and eventually found somebody who was. By the time her younger sister Johanna was settling into married life and embarking on her fateful fertility journey,
Debbie Hirsch Krieger was a full partner in a consulting firm, living in a Classic Six at 1065 Park Avenue with her husband and boys, and summering in Bridgehampton.
Between the unacknowledged star that was Debbie and the perpetual fuckup that was their younger brother Bobby, our mother ducked through adolescence in a furtive attempt not to be noticed. Johanna was an average student, a volleyball team member who mainly sat and watched, and a non-mixer in either of the two cliques that dominated her high school (these were known as the Beautifuls and the Weirdos). She kept company with a half dozen or so girls from back in elementary school, was generally fearful around boys, and gave her parents not one reason to worry about (or otherwise pay attention to) her. When she was sixteen she joined B’nai B’rith Girls at the suggestion of her sister Debbie, who was about to leave home and who worried Johanna would simply disappear once she’d gone. That was when the wondrous Mandy Bernstein, not only a Beautiful but also a twelfth grader, had materialized to sprinkle her magic fairy dust over Johanna Hirsch. Months later, Mandy was gone, off to Cornell. A year after that she was gone for good.
I’m very sorry,
said Johanna to Salo Oppenheimer that day after the service had ended. She was one of perhaps forty young women to approach him and extend her hand and say these exact words, and there was no reason for him to remember her, and in fact he did not remember her, though that had less to do with Johanna’s ordinariness than with the shrieking voice in our father’s head all through the service and burial and reception. Afterward she went in one of the cars to the cemetery and watched Mandy’s broken parents and sisters throw red clay on the coffin, and Salo Oppenheimer throw red clay on the coffin, and by the time she reached the open grave there was little left to throw. Afterward, Salo Oppenheimer had been taken away by a dowdy, dignified couple in a Lincoln Town Car, and Johanna would not see him again for several years, until the Rudnitsky wedding in Oak Bluffs.
By then, Johanna was a rising sophomore at Skidmore, not that her heart was in either her nominal major (sociology) or anything else of an educational nature. She also didn’t like Saratoga, which was full of dancers and horse people in the summer and brutally cold the rest of the time, and the series of crushes she’d developed on boys at the college always ended in some variation of It isn’t you, it’s me, usually delivered over mugs of terrible beer in one of the town taverns. If you’d asked Johanna Hirsch what, in the whole wide world, she cared about, she’d have been hard-pressed to come up with anything, not even—or perhaps especially not—herself. Basically, she was drifting, as she had always drifted, once in the gully of her family and now in the gully of her college experience.
Until, suddenly, she wasn’t.
It was one of those It isn’t you, it’s me young men who invited her to his brother’s wedding on Martha’s Vineyard. He did not explain that our mother’s role would be that of a beard (perhaps he thought he didn’t need to), but he did warn her that the likelihood of family meltdown over the course of the wedding weekend was high: his brother was marrying (and this was his parents’ word, he insisted, not his) a schwartze, and his mother had been on the verge of hysteria all spring. (In other words, no, this would not be an opportune moment to turn up without an unobjectionable female date. In other other words, it would also not be the time to make any grand announcement about his own clarifying life choices.) Johanna was game. She had never been to the famous island where, a few years earlier, that ghastly accident had occurred with the young senator and his aide, and she was curious about the family of her nominal date, who would call a Black person a schwartze, and the brother who was brave enough (or perhaps antagonistic enough) to marry someone so certain to provoke them. (To be completely fair, she’d taken the opportunity to share the relevant detail with her own mother, who’d reacted pretty much the same way as Joshua Rudnitsky’s mother had.)
When they arrived on the afternoon before the wedding, she was fairly swiftly deposited with the bridesmaids: eight women of Spelman plus Wendy Rudnitsky, the only sister of Joshua and Michael, the groom. This was hugely uncomfortable as far as Johanna was concerned, not because she was white (the bride and bridesmaids were gracious and welcoming) but because the women were mostly familiar and affectionate with one another while her own connection to the event was so very tangential. She tried to at least peel off for the rehearsal dinner, but they insisted on bringing her along to the Inn at Lambert’s Cove, and that was the place she recognized Salo Oppenheimer, a person she had sometimes thought of in the years since that terrible funeral. After the toasts, as the older family members began to drift off, and only the bride and groom and their friends remained chatting around a long table, she saw him outside, leaning on the porch railing with a glass of Champagne. Our mother went to him and reintroduced herself, extending, for the second time, her hand.
I’m sorry to have to tell you where we met before,
she said.
Our father turned to look at her. Oh,
he said, after a moment. Daniel or Mandy?
Daniel must have been the other one, she realized. The friend.
Mandy. I knew her.
She was such a good person,
said Salo.
Yes. I’m Johanna. I’m here with Michael’s brother. Joshua.
Oh,
Salo said. I thought Joshua was homosexual.
Incredibly, this was when the meaning of It isn’t you, it’s me finally reached her.
We’re just friends,
our mother said, having already expunged whatever notions she’d held (and, let’s face it, till that instant maintained) for the brother of the groom. From this moment forward it was all going to be about our father, and the great purpose of her life would be to love him enough to relieve him of his great burden, and to free him from that one, terrible shard of time in which he was so unfairly trapped, and to salve at last that wound of his, that one that wouldn’t heal. It didn’t occur to her, and wouldn’t for years, that she wasn’t the one—the only one—who’d ever be capable of doing that.
Chapter Two
The Stendahl Syndrome
In which Salo Oppenheimer tumbles and Johanna Oppenheimer begins to understand
what she’s dealing with
When our father’s Jeep lost contact with the earth, its tether of gravity stretching, stretching, then suddenly, irredeemably gone, I imagine a rasping sound of breath all around him, then a weirdly graceful tumble through the tumbling space inside: four bodies coiling and snapping in a fatal ballet. The feeling would have been bizarrely not-unpleasant if one could manage to excise the actual physical sensations from a broader understanding of what was happening, and it would never leave him. Sometimes, awake or asleep, he might find himself looking into Mandy’s surprised eyes, or hearing Daniel Abraham’s weirdly pleasant Hey!
from the back seat, or sensing that fourth person, the invisible girlfriend, somewhere behind him in the confused air: a shadow passing darkly across his right wrist. And all that contributed to his new and very specific and lifelong challenge, which was how to continue drawing breath after having caused the deaths of two people.
He never told us, not one of us, what he’d done. He never gave any of us an opportunity to understand him.
Even before the accident, our father had been a practiced dissembler, routinely allowing significant falsehoods—such as the fact that he was engaged to, or even in love with, Mandy Bernstein—to go unchallenged. Before he killed her the main reason for this was that he did not want to hurt Mandy’s feelings; after he’d killed her it was to try not to compound the pain of her family. Also, it was far easier to simply agree when people made certain assumptions, and everybody made the same assumptions, for good reason; Mandy had not only been devoted to him but had been willing (indeed, happy!) to have sex with him in his college dorm room (this was the early ’70s, after all, when a lot of nice girls wouldn’t do that). And actually, it wasn’t at all impossible that the two of them would have stayed together, married, and made a wonderful go of things. Why not? You only had to look around to see men who’d settled for far less than Mandy Bernstein! But in love, as he himself and at least some of his own children would later experience that—no. The truth was, he had never felt such a thing, and half disbelieved anyone who claimed to have done so.
Anyway, dissembling wasn’t the same as lying, especially when its purpose was to spare the feelings of the bereaved, of which there were so many, including, as it happened, Johanna Hirsch. Our mother was careful never to ask Salo about Mandy, and she obviously believed that his heart (his heart!) could never be entirely hers anyway since it must always belong, in some part, to that poor, lost girl. Also, Salo gradually decided, even a lie wasn’t an egregious lie when you simply lacked the mechanics for a certain thing (say, doing four-figure sums in your head, or performing a long jump of over ten feet, or feeling a deep connection to another human being). There were many such mechanisms our father lacked, a few of which he regretted far more than an ability to really love the woman he had supposedly intended to marry (or indeed the one he actually did marry). He lacked any musicality, for example; that was a disappointment. He lacked a kind of easy friendliness he could see in other people. Finally, and especially after the accident, he lacked a sense of fully inhabiting his own life, as if he were still, somehow, tumbling through that tumbling air. On it swirled around him as he struggled to right himself, and sometimes fought a powerful urge for it to simply stop. That was the biggest deficit of all. That impacted everything.
Salo’s pathetic physical wounds resolved so quickly they were embarrassing. Within weeks he was back in his dormitory, back in his lectures and seminars, though he avoided the people he’d known. He limped through his classes and passed them without much effort (or much distinction), and that summer flew to Europe on his own and meandered. To the strangers he fell in with (as one does, on trains or at museums), he gave only basic information: New Yorker, Cornellian, future banker, and did not volunteer the harm that was now at the center of his existence. He wasn’t in despair; he was just tumbling, perpetually tumbling, relentlessly at the mercy of that terrible weightlessness and the betrayal of gravity. No one could conceivably understand that, so what could be the point of telling them?
He began his trip in Rome and drifted north through Milan, Geneva, Paris. He didn’t mind being alone, though it was clear that the packs of young people, hitching or traveling by the new Student Rail Pass, were a little mystified by him. A tourist their own age and obviously affluent—he slept in hotels, not hostels—traveling alone? But of course he wasn’t always alone. He was fine with meeting the people he met. He was content to buy them meals—he could afford it; why not?—or a ticket to some tourist site that could not be missed. And if they were heading somewhere next that sounded no worse than anywhere else, he often went with them, because there was no place in particular he wanted to be, so what did it matter where he was? When the world is tipping beneath you and you are tumbling even when you are sitting, even when you are sleeping (especially when you are sleeping), any place is the same as any other place.
All this, like every other private thing, he would tell only one person, who would one day tell us.
In Bruges he tried cannabis for the first time, even a little bit hopeful that it would help, but it didn’t. In Amsterdam he met an art student in a café, and he had dinner with her and even went to bed with her in a flat she shared with a sculptor and a state-registered heroin addict, both amiable guys. Her name was Margot and there was an art exhibition in Krefeld, in Germany, that she wanted to see, so Salo folded his long legs into her brown Peugeot and drove east with her. When he showed his American passport at the border the guard looked sharply at him and held that look, and abruptly the hairs on Salo’s arms stood up. It hadn’t occurred to him that it wouldn’t be innocuous, this trip. This crossing. The car was waved forward, and Margot drove on. It was his first time in Germany.
Krefeld was not so far from the border. Margot was talking about the man whose work she wanted to see, who had once painted soup cans and bananas but was now making movies of people staring or sleeping. She seemed surprised that our father had never heard of the artist, but he told her about the sort of paintings he’d grown up with on the walls of his family’s New York apartment, the low-country landscapes and portraits of jolly women and smug, prosperous men. He did not tell her that some of those paintings had been donated to his university the very month he’d applied for admission; possibly he’d understood how crass, how outlandishly American such a gesture would have appeared to her. Instead, he turned to watch the country—this dreaded country—run past, and marveled at how ordinary it seemed: grocery stores, car lots, playing fields with soccer games in progress and parents watching on the sidelines. He thought about these same towns and fields and roads at the time of Joseph Oppenheimer, our mythic ancestor, and at the time of Goebbels’s Jud Süss. He thought about why anyone would paint a banana, and what you’d have to paint it with to make sure the paint didn’t peel off, and he wondered why a film of somebody sleeping was art. He didn’t think it was worth asking Margot about either of these things.
The Kunstmuseen Krefeld was actually two side-by-side buildings made of brick, large and flat and blocky, like a middle school in a dreary American suburb. Salo and Margot had been on the road for nearly three hours, and she went to use the bathroom while he bought tickets. When she reappeared she asked the guard where those film pictures were, and then she was off to find what she’d come for. Salo followed. He was there, in Krefeld, Germany, with a girl he was more than ready to part from. He was there, but he was also, as always, in that other place, the tumbling place, the place he was used to now, or if he wasn’t used to it he knew he had to figure out how to be, because it was not going to change. He couldn’t remember how to walk as if the floor might not at any moment pitch sideways or upside down, but this was simply a skill he would have to master, and also he was getting better at it. He entered the first gallery.
Those paintings our father had grown up with in his parents’ Fifth Avenue apartment, rheumy apertures to other continents in other centuries, were as unremarkable to him as the Peter Max posters on the walls of his fraternity house, or the framed Eliot Porter photographs his college friends were beginning to put up on the Sheetrock walls of their New York apartments. Unremarkable, as in: not to be remarked upon, or taken notice of, which was very far from appreciation, let alone admiration, let alone love. And when, two years before the day Salo entered the Kunstmuseen Krefeld, trailing a girl he was fated never to see again, about half of his parents’ Old Master paintings departed in a sudden exodus to Cornell University’s Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, our grandparents never bothered to ask if he wanted to keep one, or a few, or indeed all of them for himself. (Why would they? He’d never asked a single question about a single painting!) He’d simply returned home from his camp counselor job at Androscoggin that summer and noticed the blank wall beside his bedroom door where Boy with a Spoon (Bartholomeus van der Heist, 1643) had been hanging ever since he could remember. Boy with a Spoon had left the building, along with eleven others, and when it eventually materialized inside I.M. Pei’s brand-new concrete building while our father was still an undergraduate, he never even went to see it. That was how untouched he was by even that painting, or any other painting, until what happened next.
With his first step into the gallery, Salo lost his hard-won mastery of remaining upright. The floor playfully darted away, then flipped overhead, and down he went, hitting first with a bony hip and then an elbow and finally a cheek, which landed in near repose along with the rest of his head. Accordingly, he closed his eyes, strangely not unhappy and already marveling at the thing he had seen before he fell, feasting upon it inside his head: imprinted. Then—far too soon—the tug of hands on his own arms. These were guards, tall men in khaki uniforms and hissing walkie-talkies, and they pulled him up like a newborn insulted to be expelled from the womb. One of them set down a folding chair. It was, our father would learn, a special chair, kept precisely for the emergency needs of affected tourists.
Stendahl syndrome
was the name for this, he would eventually learn. Dizziness, confusion, even fainting, usually by foreign visitors in the act of viewing great art. It was called that because the French writer had given its first and best description: I was in a sort of ecstasy … Absorbed in the contemplation of sublime beauty … I reached the point where one encounters celestial sensations … Everything spoke so vividly to my soul … Life was drained from me …
He thanked them, of course, but mostly he hoped they would go away, so he could look at it in peace, and eventually they did.
The painting was large and square. It had a kind of fawn-colored background nearly obscured by frantic, scribbled loops of orange and red, relentless, swirling in an exhausting scrawl. He could not take his eyes off that orange, that red, those rhythmic loops, their valiant attempt to scribble something away.
He thought: Is this really art?
He thought: Why does it help?
He thought: Who gets to look at this?
Margot came back, escorted by one of the guards. She came to his chair and bent down to look at Salo. You seem okay,
she said. They told me you fainted.
Maybe,
Salo said.
Are you sick?
He could tell she didn’t want him to be sick. She did not want to drive a sick person three hours back to Amsterdam, and he was pretty sure she didn’t want to spend the night with a sick person in Krefeld, either.
Oh no,
he said, trying to sound cheery. The whole time, he never took his eyes off the painting.
Well, so you like modern art after all,
she observed.
I like that,
he confirmed. I don’t know what it is.
She walked up to it and looked at the card. "Untitled. That’s helpful. He’s an American. She tried to sound out his name, but couldn’t get closer than
tomb-ley or
twom-ble.
Oh look, he used house paint and wax crayon. Not quite your Flemish landscapes."
No, our father agreed.
Do you want to see the rest of the exhibit?
He didn’t, he said, but she should go back. He wanted her to leave him alone with the painting. He wanted the world to leave him alone with the painting.
Basically, he found a way to stay until the Kunstmuseen closed that evening, after which he and Margot (who’d been very disappointed by those movie stills) endured the long drive back to Amsterdam and parted in Dam Square, never to meet again. Our father had recognized that he knew nothing about anything. He had not the first understanding of what he had seen, or where the thing he had seen had come from, or what other paintings by other artists were already in conversation with this one, or what any of this had to teach him. Also, he had no idea when he might live in a place where he might put such an object on his wall and look at it, every morning, every night. Also, he would not, for a few years yet, be in control of the money held in trust for him, and he would not begin drawing a salary from Wurttemberg until after finishing college. But he knew, as he had never known anything before, that he would somehow, at some time, own that painting.
Back at Cornell in the fall, he unenrolled from his fraternity, not because the men were in any way insensitive but because he found that he couldn’t stand to enter those rooms and not see Danny Abraham, a person he’d considered almost unbearably kind. Someone told him the girl who’d been Daniel’s date that terrible day had left Cornell. Salo could not remember her at all. He could not even picture her face; he was not sure he had even turned his head when the two of them, Daniel and the girl, climbed into the back seat of the Jeep, or if he’d ever been told her name. He didn’t ask where she’d gone; he felt only relief that he would not have to meet her in some classroom or cafeteria. For the rest of his time in college he wanted to not make any friends and not make any waves; he wanted only to complete his degree without fucking up another thing. He knew enough not to shift his major from economics to anything else, let alone art. Art was an established tradition within the Oppenheimer family, and that was enough to justify an early-morning survey course, and one on the Modernists, and one on Pollock and his circle. Art was also an acknowledged part of the apparatus of wealth, indeed, a not unuseful vector for acquiring wealth. (Selda and our grandfather, Hermann, were not sentimental and they were not stupid: the seventeen Old Master paintings that remained in the Fifth Avenue apartment after Boy with a Spoon and the others departed had been earmarked by Sotheby’s as having the greatest value and/or potential appreciation.) Salo did not need to have any of this explained to him. If he wanted to own and live in the world of paintings once the business of the workday was done, that was his right, indeed our family tradition! But he would continue to study economics and after graduation he would, without complaint, step into the place prepared for him by his father and the fathers before them—the Broad Street offices of Wurttemberg Holdings—there to serve the business of being an Oppenheimer for the rest of his professional life.
When he turned twenty-one, two months before leaving college, he was given access to his trust, and within days he had enlisted the help of the Marlborough gallery to make the purchase from Galleria Sperone in Turin (for an amount that would forever strike him as absurd). Four months later the crate arrived, and when the movers pried it open and went away, he nearly ran after them, terrified to be left in charge of this object and stunned that they—that anyone—actually trusted him to be its caretaker. Even in such an uninspired setting, it had lost not the tiniest fragment of its power.
The setting in question was the perfectly ordinary apartment Salo had rented, in a white brick building on Third Avenue, just your basic young professional one-bedroom with Sheetrock walls, a Jennifer Convertibles sofa he’d bought right off the floor of the shop, a glass and chrome coffee table, and a couple of chairs from Habitat. Now it was all that plus an iconic artwork by an American master that would one day be worth seventy million dollars. Our father had first attempted to hang the Twombly from a lonely nail he’d inexpertly hammered in (off-center and too low), but the weight of the picture promptly tore the nail and a chunk of Sheetrock out of the wall and the picture fell forward, with Salo barely managing to catch it before it hit the coffee table. (One of us, on learning this detail, would not soon recover from it.) After that, the picture remained on the floor, leaning against the wall and just covering the missing chunk. Salo, quite obviously, had no particular interest in beautiful spaces, let alone furnishings, not even furnishings that might conceivably be more comfortable than the ones he had, and he barely used the kitchen. Every corner in his neighborhood had a Korean grocer, and every Korean grocer had a salad bar, so after work he went there and spooned some hot dish into his plastic tray, then he went back to the apartment and sat on his convertible sofa and ate off his lap with a plastic fork, barely taking his eyes off the painting. That’s how he spent his first year at Wurttemberg.
The following summer, when our parents met (re-met) at that wedding on the Vineyard, he saw, before anything else, that Johanna Hirsch was a person in Mandy Bernstein’s mold. Not quite as attractive, maybe, and not quite as smart, but strangely just as loving toward him, as if he were some great prize to be won. He’d been holding on to the rail as the rehearsal dinner wound down, possibly a little drunk and wondering what it would be like to live here, on the island, when suddenly this person was standing next to him and calling him back to those first appalling days: the somber shaking of hands, the enfolding by strangers who vibrated as they held you, the smells of grief. But she knew what he’d done, and she was here anyway. Something inside him slipped into place: not love, not a sudden recognition of his own terrible loneliness, not even desire. Only he thought, looking at her, noting the obvious nervousness as she spoke and understanding that she wanted, for some unfathomable reason, his good opinion: Why not? Here was a pretty, amiable girl who seemed to have decided, apparently on the spot, that the redress of his great personal tragedy—for the record, not his own cosmic view of the matter—ought to be her purpose in life, or at least its priority.
That fall, Johanna returned to Skidmore for her sophomore year and Salo continued to work downtown alongside his father. He didn’t dislike what he was doing and he wasn’t bad at it. He could sense in the other employees, many of whom had been with Wurttemberg for decades, a collective relief that he appeared to be dutiful in his attitude toward the company, competent as he familiarized himself with a century and a half of holdings, and even creative as he began to put together deals of his own. On the weekends our mother came down on the train and stayed with him, something she was less than forthcoming about with her own parents. Salo hadn’t slept with anyone since the Dutch art student he’d been with that day in Germany, when he first saw the Twombly. He’d known it was absurd to be a young man, in the 1970s (when even women were shrugging off old ideas about promiscuity), and living like an ascetic in some religious order, but he’d felt incapable of crossing that abyss. Johanna took charge of the whole thing, somehow, meaning that he was not required to do anything but be accommodating. And once they were having sex (in other words, almost immediately) he was relieved to discover that his body remembered how to do this strange, animal thing, and also how to like it. It comforted him to sleep all night and wake up next to Johanna. He had never actually done that, not even with Mandy