Fic­tion

Trust Me

  • Review
By – October 1, 2024

Ear­ly on in Scott Nadelson’s tren­chant, deeply mov­ing new nov­el, Trust Me, an ado­les­cent girl named Skye won­ders if she loves her father, Lewis.

Right now I do,” she admits to her­self, though she fears she can’t take lov­ing him for grant­ed. And that’s, well … unnerving.

The book is com­posed of fifty-two vignettes that alter­nate between Skye’s per­spec­tive and Lewis’s. Skye spends week­ends with her father, who is new­ly divorced, in an A‑frame cab­in in the untamed wilder­ness of West­ern Ore­gon, where almost every­thing he does seems strange to her.”

When it comes to his daugh­ter, Lewis seems sim­i­lar­ly mys­ti­fied. She’s twelve — or, as she tells him, Twelve-and-a-half for cry­ing out loud” — a braces-wear­ing sev­enth grad­er with a per­ma­nent pout that reminds him, dis­con­cert­ing­ly, of his ex-wife, Veron­i­ca. He’s always called her Sil­ly — Sills” for short — a nick­name that must be wear­ing painful­ly thin for a girl pre­oc­cu­pied with the mid­dle school peck­ing order and imag­in­ing her first kiss.

Skye spends the school week with her moth­er in Port­land, then dri­ves with her father each week­end forty-five min­utes to the cab­in in the foothills of the Cas­cade moun­tains. In this rus­tic, self-con­tained uni­verse, where there is no TV or inter­net ser­vice, they pass the time fly fish­ing, play­ing end­less games of Risk, and hunt­ing oys­ter mush­rooms and king bolete, the prize of the woods.

Lewis is a hap­less out­sider, a lit­tle New Jer­sey Jew play­ing man of the moun­tains.” (Veron­i­ca, his ex, grew up out­side Port­land.) One Sun­day, when a trio of ATV rid­ers roars up the grav­el road, he becomes acute­ly aware of the ways in which he is dif­fer­ent. “ … his hair dark­er and curli­er, his nose longer and bumpi­er, his hands grab­bing stacks of coins.” Sills, study­ing for a test, asks him to restore the peace. But all Lewis can think about is The Pro­to­cols of the Elders of Zion.

Grow­ing up, Lewis lived in a most­ly Ital­ian and Irish Catholic neigh­bor­hood in North Jer­sey. His fam­i­ly wasn’t Jew­ish­ly obser­vant; they lit Hanukkah can­dles for two nights before for­get­ting the next six. Lewis is unnerved by his daughter’s glee at cut­ting down a Christ­mas tree not because of Jew­ish guilt, but because he just finds it sense­less to cut down a per­fect­ly healthy tree.” When he tells Sills as much, he ruins the rit­u­al for her. But her dis­ap­point­ment bare­ly registers.

She’s also a Jew after all — in the eyes of Nazis, at least if not the Ortho­dox,” Lewis thinks. Shouldn’t she have some sense of the world as flawed and com­pro­mised, even in its joy­ful moments?”

There are no car chas­es, no explo­sions or gun­fights or UFOs glimpsed above tree­tops. And yet as the nov­el pro­gress­es, ten­sion begins to build, qui­et­ly at first, and then in a cas­cade. Read­ers are left won­der­ing whether Sills will con­tin­ue to love a dad who’s reel­ing from what he calls the dull throb of loss that nev­er quite dissipates.”

Josh Rol­nick is a short sto­ry writer, author of the col­lec­tion Pulp and Paper, which won the John Sim­mons Short Fic­tion Award. He is a fac­ul­ty lec­tur­er at the Johns Hop­kins MA in Writ­ing Pro­gram, an instruc­tor at Sack­ett Street Writ­ers, and fic­tion edi­tor at Paper Brigade, the lit­er­ary annu­al of the Jew­ish Book Council.

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