Ratings3
Average rating3.3
What if a lookalike stranger stole your name, usurped your biography and went around the world pretending to be you? In this tour de force of fact and fiction, Philip Roth meets a man who may or may not be Philip Roth. Because someone with that name has been touring the State of Israel, promoting a bizarre exodus in reverse of the Jews. Roth decides to stop him—even if that means impersonating his impersonator. Suspenseful, hilarious, hugely impassioned, pulsing with intelligence and narrative energy, Operation Shylock is at once a spy story, a political thriller, a meditation on identity, and a confession. Like Pushkin and Dostoevsky before him, Philip Roth takes on the subject of the writer’s double, which for Roth is inevitably bound up in Jewishness and identity. This is a bold, inventive and energetic departure from his past novels, a meta-novel, and, like all of his writing, full of ideas, wit, humor and startling observation.
Reviews with the most likes.
I should have loved this book. Roth has rightfully earned his place as one of the best writers of his generation, and I've probably read roughly 20 of his books. Plus, the concept of this book is fascinating. Roth encountering a Philip Roth impostor who is promoting a reverse exodus of the Jews.
Yet...
Somehow this book didn't work for me. At times, it grabbed me. As always, much of the dialogue was fantastic. But the lengthy speeches or thoughts on various issues didn't grab me the way his work often has in the past, and ultimately I made my way through this at a slower pace than any other Roth book I've read.