'To Die in Secret': A compelling novel about a woman coping with tragedy - review

Some of the relationships, such as that of Nomi and her mother, whom she hasn’t seen in 40 years and is now facing dementia, are laced with regret; others of unfulfilled potential.

 Author Haviva Ner-David (photo credit: Courtesy)
Author Haviva Ner-David
(photo credit: Courtesy)

First off, two caveats: Rabbi Haviva Ner-David is a friend of mine. And as a “woman of a certain age,” like her, and an immigrant to Israel as an adult, I was immediately drawn in by Nomi, the main character in her new book, To Die in Secret, whom we first meet on a plane to the US after her sister and nephew are found dead.

“Not taking up much room in the world, perhaps no room at all, ephemeral and barely existing. That’s how Nomi felt. She looked out the airplane window, at the clouds – floating, like she was. Suspended between here and there.”

Nomi is an American immigrant to a fictional kibbutz in northern Israel, where she has lived for the past 40 years. Her husband, Avi, has recently died of COVID-19, and Nomi is adrift. She has never felt fully at home on the kibbutz.

“Over the years, Nomi was slowly accepted by the kibbutzniks but not fully. She wondered if she should go back there when she returned to Israel. But with no money or education beyond high school, she did not know how to support herself if she left the kibbutz. There, she worked in agriculture in the fields, orchards, and hot houses. She knew her place; it was safe, even if not perfect.

“So now here she was, over 40 years after leaving the US, pressing reverse on her life.”

Haviva Ner-David, rabbi and author (credit: Courtesy)
Haviva Ner-David, rabbi and author (credit: Courtesy)

Understanding the trauma in strained familial relationships

Ner-David is also a rabbi and knows how to write about relationships and human nature. Some of the relationships, such as that of Nomi and her mother, whom she hasn’t seen in 40 years and is now facing dementia, are laced with regret; others, like that of Nomi and her dead sister, Jude, reek of unfulfilled potential.

Throughout the book, there are memories of a past trauma that first sent Nomi into exile, a subplot about a pregnant Orthodox teenager, and a possible romantic relationship with John, a sympathetic non-Jewish police officer.

Nomi goes to the US to sort out her sister’s estate and finds that she has inherited a farmhouse on the outskirts of Salem, Massachusetts. The house, and the area, also become a character in the novel, which morphs from literary fiction to suspense and back.

I’m always a little hesitant when friends ask me to review their books, afraid of what I’ll write if I don’t enjoy the book. In this case, I read most of the book over one Shabbat, and I was so immersed in the characters that I almost forgot I was in my living room in Jerusalem, and not in a farmhouse in Salem.

The book is well written and challenging, which is about all you can ask from a novel these days.  ■

  • To Die in Secret
  • Haviva Ner-David
  • Bedazzled Ink Publishing Company, 2023
  • 250 pages; $19.95 (paperback)