Tobit’s Dog, A Novel by Michael Nicholas Richard (Reviewed by Nancy Ward)
Tobit’s Dog is a love story amid the battle between heaven and
hell for the souls of the good guys as well as the racists, murderers, rapists,
thieves and connivers not portrayed in the biblical version of the Book of
Tobit. In this imaginary take on the
Book of Tobit, exciting enough a tale, Richard skillfully uses the characters,
symbols, and scriptural principles. All the vital elements are there: Tobit’s
sudden blindness and miraculous healing. Prejudice and bravery — this time,
involving a lynching and Tobiah’s arrest for his compassion toward the boy
hanging from a tree.
Richard
sets this, his first professionally
published novel, in North Carolina
during the depression. The Jim Crow era provides the tension between the black
characters (Tobiah and family) and the white businessmen and law enforcement
determined to keep the Negros in their place. And they are Catholics. Is this how the
enemies of the Jews treated the chosen people during their exile?
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