
Book #100 of 2026:
The Golem of Brooklyn by Adam Mansbach
A golem is a creature out of Jewish mythology, said to be carved from clay and brought to life with the proper incantations to defend its maker’s community during times of strife. This 2023 volume places one in a modern madcap satire, although I’d say the attempts at humor are no more than sporadically effective. Better is the twist on the traditional lore that there has only ever been one such being, whose same consciousness manifests whenever a new avatar is built and awakened in the right way. And of course, the prospect of directing this fabled defender of Judaism against a Charlottesville-style rally of torch-wielding and conspiracy-chanting white nationalists carries a certain delirious appeal, even if our main protagonist objects that killing them would be wrong.
In truth, an entire story could have been forged from that debate alone, with passionate Talmudic arguments getting assayed back and forth over the morality of bloody eye-for-an-eye justice. Here, however, the argument is fairly truncated, which tends to blunt the impact considerably. So too the idea of the golem missing the Holocaust and only learning about it decades after the fact, or the question of how it went unsummoned for so long when a random secular art teacher was able to figure out how to construct the thing from the internet. This book is unfortunately just too short to handle these matters appropriately, especially given its tendency to fly off on bizarre tangents like a supporting character’s plan for a screenplay involving interspecies human-dolphin erotica.
There are still elements to enjoy in this title. It’s the clear work of a savvy cultural Jew (with an extended cameo from Larry David, even), it’s one of the rare novels from the past decade to actually feature and critique the racism of the alt-right political movement, and it delivers some fun wordplay and lines of reasoning throughout. “Did the existence of a golem imply the existence of God?” someone muses at one point. “One hundred percent. But this was an easy answer, as the existence of bees also implied the existence of God.” That’s an incredibly Jewish take on the situation, but it doesn’t necessarily do anything to strengthen the surrounding plot.
[Content warning for homophobia, gun violence, and gore.]
★★★☆☆
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