Q&A: Jews Behaving Badly

In the July 18, 1988, issue of The New Yorker, Adam Schwartz published “The Grammar of Love,” a short story based on his teaching experiences in Chicago. He followed with the publication of “This Bed” in the June 22, 1992, issue, and earlier this year, both stories were incorporated into the novel “A Stranger on the Planet,” which follows Seth Shapiro through his life. We meet Seth as a lost adolescent, and watch him become a somewhat-less-lost man. Seth and his family are, as Schwartz says, “New Jersey Jews behaving badly”—his mother is needy; his twin sister is pragmatic yet willful; and his father, who is married to the French woman that broke up his marriage to Seth’s mother, is cold and later estranged. Also estranged is Seth’s brother, Seamus, who responds to his family’s distress by becoming orthodox.

Recently, Schwartz and I exchanged e-mails about truth, divorce, and the writing life; read more at newyorker.com…

Published by Sally

I’m the deputy managing editor at strategy + business, a freelance editor at Belt, and the former web manager at The New Yorker. My writing and editing also has appeared in The New York Times, The Independent, the Observer, the Rumpus, the Cleveland Clinic Press, and Northern Ohio Live. Additionally, I was a founding team member of Maven, a healthcare app for women. I live in Brooklyn with my husband, the musician and writer Mike Errico, and our daughter. Follow me @sally_errico.