By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO—This mystery novel featuring the continuing character of
Police Chief Superintendent Michael Ohayon was published posthumously, and
author Batya Gur, who died last year, leaves us with a melancholy
legacy.
Characters in the book voice deep distress over whether Jews have any future
in Israel, given its island status in a sea of Arab hatred. This is
hardly the message many of us want to read at a time when Israel is engaged in
a two-front war, but chances are publisher HarperCollins may welcome the
controversy that such thoughts may engender. Murder in Jerusalem may
mean profits in New York.
Leaving aside the political rhetoric, I found the detective story itself to be
a bit clunky. First a woman is found dead at Israel television's Channel
One, the government station, and not long after that one of her colleagues
dies of a heart attack while being questioned by the police. While all
this is going on, we experience the mayhem of a competitive television news
operation and the contradictions of Israeli society—all the while wondering
how much of the fuss has anything to do with the two deaths under
investigation, and how much of it is simply "color commentary."
Striking Israeli workers decide to take a minister of the Israeli government
hostage, but she is rescued by a television reporter whom she finds incredibly
sexy.. A young reporter, willing to use her body to advance her career,
runs afoul of a mysterious Orthodox Jewish group, whom she believes are
engaged in criminal activities. Those are just two of the subplots in a
mystery that is so peopled with excess characters that, even before a third
death occurs, it is easy to lose the thread of the main
story.
Perhaps all the extra chatter in the book is because the fictional Ohayon
believes that if you let people talk, and talk, eventually they will volunteer
information vital to solving murder cases.. Or perhaps, it was because
author Gur had a premonition of her passing, and wanted to get a lot off her
own chest.
Many people enjoyed Gur's previous works, including Murder on a Kibbutz and
Bethlehem Road Murder, so for them this book will be essential farewell
reading. For the rest of us, however, this whodunnit is a ho-hummer with
too much talk, too little action.