The fact that Queen Esther isn’t a masterpiece seems neither surprising nor, frankly, the point. What’s most wonderful about Queen Esther is that it returns us to the St. Cloud’s orphanage immortalized in Irving’s magnificent 1985 novel, The Cider House Rules ... Offers as many false starts as spring in Maine ... In the basement of this book, there’s a thrilling story about a woman fighting for the establishment and then the defense of the modern state of Israel ... This may be a story about the education of a novelist, but I don’t think I’ve ever read a novel that struggles so long to cohere. That failing feels all the more disappointing considering the masterful structure of The Cider House Rules, which, despite a long, lumpy plot, always finds its way home ... Flawed.
Read Full Review >>