(7/15/2015)
'The Devil in Jerusalem' was a gripping book about a young woman's path to misery and the devastation of her family, including harm to her children. Her weakness and lack of character allowed her to be manipulated by many, including her family, her husband and later cult leaders.
The book begins describing her childhood and the various people who influenced her in her life, including her parents, her brother, her grandmother, and, eventually, her husband. He was weak and needy, like her, and she followed him blindly, in the name of religion, both looking for affirmation of their goodness and successful-ness, resulting in their manipulation by psychopaths, masquerading as God's messengers.
The book was graphic, painful and depressing as the parents weakness and mistakes resulted into harm to their children by cult members.
The book would have been more interesting, if it had delved further into the psychological study of what made these parents, seemingly, so susceptible to such influence, rather than focusing on the sensational plot.
Until the very end, I did not think that enough distinction was made from Judaism or the study of Kabbala. And, I worry that many readers may not finish the book to learn that this was a cult, and not the practice of Judaism or Kabbala because the details are so disturbing.
That being said, I could not put it down, and was curious to finish the story. Although, the book is fiction, it is a novel inspired by true events.