Operation Shylock: A Confession is a 1993 novel by American novelist Philip Roth. The novel is presented as a first-person narrative by the author, following him on a trip to Israel and describing how he undertook the titular "operation" for the Israeli intelligence service.

Deliberately blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction, the novel explores themes on the nature of the self, Jewish identity in Israel and the diaspora, and the relationship of an author to their work.

On publication, the novel was controversial due to its postmodern devices, ostensible self-obsession and its treatment of the Israeli-Arab conflict, but has been the subject of renewed interest and acclaim since.

Plot

The novel follows narrator "Philip Roth" on a journey to Israel, where he attends the trial of accused war criminal John Demjanjuk and becomes involved in an intelligence mission—the "Operation Shylock" of the title.

The book begins with the narrator recovering from a three month emotional collapse driven by the side effects of later-banned sleeping pill Halcion. Undertaking to travel to Israel to interview Israeli author Aharon Appelfeld, he is side-tracked by the news that an impersonator has appropriated his identity. The impersonator has Roth's facial features, goes by the same name, and uses Roth's status as a celebrity author to spread "Diasporism", a counter-Zionist ideology advocating the return to Europe of all formerly Ashkenazi Jews in Israel in order to avert a second Holocaust by Arab countries.

The ensuing struggle between this doppelgänger-like stranger and "Roth", played against the backdrop of the Demjanjuk trial and the First Intifada, constitutes the book's primary storyline. Roth becomes romantically involved with Jinx Posseski, his doppelgänger's lover and partner in crime. He also has several face-to-face confrontations with his double; each time, the other "Philip Roth" (whom Roth dubs "Moishe Pipik") accuses him of taking his fame too lightly, and eschewing his responsibilities to people in the real world.

Because the central proposition of "Diasporism" is highly amenable to the PLO, a Palestinian graduate school friend of Philip's named George Ziad attempts to put Roth in contact with the actual PLO. Ziad believes Philip is the one expounding diasporism, unaware of Pipik's impersonation. Roth intends to refuse until he is kidnapped by Louis B. Smilesburger, an agent of the Mossad, Israel's intelligence agency. He urges him to accept Ziad's offer, so that Philip can gather intelligence for Israel.

Roth apparently does so, but the end of the book reveals that Operation Shylock is (supposedly) missing an excised chapter where Roth describes the details and outcome of his Mossad mission.

Main characters

Philip Roth (Philip)

thumb|Roth in the 1980s

Purportedly the real life Philip Roth, a famous Jewish American author in his fifties. He is the unreliable narrator of the novel.

Philip Roth (Moishe Pipik)

A former private detective who bears a striking resemblance to the author Philip Roth, as well as sharing the same name. He is devoted to and consumed by the ideology of "diasporism", which seeks to repatriate Ashkenazi Jews from Israel to their European countries of origin.

Once physically imposing, he is terminally ill with cancer and uses a penile implant after surgery has left him impotent. Jinx Possesski is his lover.

Wanda Jane "Jinx" Possesski

Pipik's lover, and formerly his nurse at the hospital where he was being treated for cancer. Possesski is a "recovering anti-Semite"; a member of Pipik's "Anti-Semites Anonymous" group.

John Demjanjuk

A real Ukrainian-born Ohio mechanic in his sixties, on trial in Jerusalem for committing atrocities at Treblinka death camp during the Holocaust.

Louis B. Smilesburger

A genial but cunning agent of the Israeli Mossad. Walking with crutches, he first appears as decrepit and elderly, he presents himself as a supporter of Pipik's diasporism. He later reveals his actual role and intentions, describing himself as a "ruthless man working in a ruthless job for a ruthless country".

George Ziad

A college friend of Philip's who remembers him as "Zee", a suave Egyptian ladies' man. Philip encounters him and discovers that he is in fact Palestinian, and that he has left the comfort of American academia for "a life of continuous eloquent hatred for demonized arrogant occupying Israelis" in Ramallah. Operation Shylock is also, together with The Counterlife, one of Roth's two "Israel novels".

The association between Roth and his protagonists is one of the characteristic features of Roth's writing. Roth has expressed frustration with the way people have read his fictional protagonists as stand-ins for the author, but also deliberately employed the effect of giving the impression of "confession". Operation Shylock destabilizes the dichotomy between the two, anchoring a clearly surreal narrative in a real historical and personal context. Several analyses of the book quote Roth in Deception, "I write fiction and I'm told it's autobiography, I write autobiography and I'm told it's fiction...let them decide what it is or isn't".

Operation Shylock also directly addresses the subjectivity, indeterminacy and fragmentation of the self. Protagonist Philip's Halcion-induced breakdown is described as a process of mental "self-disintegration" or coming apart. Philip's decision in turn to impersonate Pipik emphasises that the self is contingent and improvised.

At the same time, the narrative is set against the backdrop of the trial of John Demjanjuk, which revolves around a differently contested claim of identity - whether Demjanjuk had been Ivan the Terrible, a notoriously monstrous guard at the Nazi extermination camp of Treblinka. Considering the seemingly mutually excluding lives of a Nazi war criminal and a peaceful family man in Ohio, Philip concludes that Demjanjuk is not unusual in this regard, and indeed that many Nazis had managed to enjoy the duality of war criminal and "family man" simultaneously. the reverse of the Zionist conception of Israel as a safe haven. All make moral and political claims on Philip, who finds that though he is sympathetic to Pipik's and Ziad's arguments, he accedes to the demands of the Israeli.

Purported veracity

In March 1993, Roth maintained the veracity of his novel to The New York Times Esther B. Fein, who wrote, "Operation Shylock, Roth insists with a post-modern straight face, is a 'confession,' not a novel, and he means for us to take this every bit as seriously as the contents labels demanded by the strictures of the Food and Drug Administration. 'The book is true,' Roth said the other day. 'As you know, at the end of the book a Mossad operative made me realize it was in my interest to say this book was fiction. And I became quite convinced that it was in my interest to do that. So I added the note to the reader as I was asked to do. I'm just a good Mossadnik.'" Debra Shostak considers that the autobiographical presentation led readers to "want to know if the events, ranging from the plausible to the implausible, happened verifiably."

The post-operative nervous breakdown mentioned in the prologue and in other books by or about Roth was drawn from Roth's real-life experience of the temporary side-effects of a post-operative sedative (triazolam) which was later banned in several countries after discovery that the manufacturer had not published studies showing a high risk of short term psychiatric disturbance.

Press investigations revealed that some of Philip Roth's encounters in Operation Shylock had happened to the author, such as Roth's interview of Appelfeld, though not as described in the book. In 2017, Roth objected to Wikipedia ascribing to the author the Triazolam-induced breakdown undergone by Operation Shylocks protagonist.

Roth's long-time professional acquaintance John Updike gave the novel a famously caustic review in The New Yorker. Updike found the book "an orgy of argumentation...this hard-pressed reviewer was reminded not only of Shaw but of Hamlet, which also has too many characters, numerous long speeches, and a vacillating, maddening hero who in the end shows the right stuff." Updike closed with the admonition, "It should be read by anyone who cares about (1) Israel and its repercussions, (2) the development of the postmodern, deconstruction-minded novel, (3) Philip Roth." Norman Lebrecht similarly criticized the novel for "self-obsession", and said that it failed both as fiction and as autobiographical confession. Philip Hensher called the book an "immoral misuse of fiction", praising it as a technical achievement but castigating it for its portrayal of Palestinians and anti-Zionism.

In The New York Times Book Review, novelist and poet D. M. Thomas called the novel "an impassioned quarrel...Despite the seriousness of its theme, the book carries the feeling of creative joy. One feels that Roth feels that he's let rip." In Time magazine, Paul Gray called the book "a lot of fun" and observed "Roth has not riffed with quite this comic abandon since Portnoy’s Complaint. And the social and historical range of Operation Shylock is broader than anything the author has attempted before."

The novel appears to have grown in stature since publication. In 2006, when New York Times Book Review editor Sam Tanenhaus mailed a short letter to "a couple of hundred prominent writers, critics, editors," asking that they identify the best work of American fiction published in the preceding quarter-century, several respondents named Operation Shylock. (The eventual winner was Toni Morrison's 1987 Beloved.) Reporting upon Roth's reception of the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, critic Jonathan Derbyshire of the New Statesman wrote, "The judging panel make the inevitable reference in their summing-up to Roth's extraordinary fecundity over the past 15 years or so, at a stage in his life when 'most novelists are in decline'. The most notable fruits of Roth's Indian summer, 1995's Sabbath's Theater and American Pastoral, published two years later, are certainly among his most luminous achievements. But two slightly earlier novels stand out for me, both of them hectically metafictional works partly set in Israel: The Counterlife (1986) and Operation Shylock."

After Roth's death, The New York Times asked several prominent writers to name their favorite book by him. Daniel Mendelsohn cast his vote for Operation Shylock, writing: "Here, the coruscating linguistic brilliance, the profanity and playfulness (and the deep, often irritated engagement with Jewishness) that characterizes his earlier novels rise to new — and, I would say, philosophical — heights. For the two Roths finally meet in a Jerusalem that is anxiously hosting the trial of John Demjanjuk, the Ukrainian-born Ohio autoworker who was revealed to have been a sadistic guard at a Nazi death camp: a setting that amplifies the significance of Roth's favorite themes of identity and imposture, truth and fictionality, and gives the ostensibly zany, Quixote-esque plot an ultimately tragic historical resonance."

Awards

Operation Shylock received the 1993 PEN/Faulkner Award for best novel. Roth would eventually become the first three-time winner of the award: for Shylock, 2001's The Human Stain, and 2007's Everyman.

References

  • Roth on Operation Shylock in The New York Times
  • D.M. Thomas on Operation Shylock in The New York Times Book Review