Vol. 1 Brooklyn: "A wholly original yet deeply rooted effort, full of insight and beauty that deserves our attention."
Date: Sep 25 2012
Over the span of sixteen years, Thomas Mann penned what he thought of as his greatest work: a four part novel entitled Joseph and His Brothers  which retells the biblical story of Joseph in Egypt. That few (if any)  of us ever heard of these novels attests to the irrelevance of the Bible  to our literary consciousness. Yet authors have long made use of the  Bible in one way or another: Dostoevsky made heavy use of Biblical  themes and allusions in many if not all of his books, and Melville  famously used the story of Jonah in the form of a sermon as the backdrop  for Moby Dick. Today the Bible appears sporadically in  contemporary literature: Marilynne Robinson relies on it often, but for  the most part it now stands as an exotic text.
 Richard Beard, in his new book LAZARUS IS DEAD,  makes a compelling case for the relevance of the Bible to literature.  Lazarus, in case you forgot (or, like me, never learned the New  Testament), was raised from the dead by Jesus as written in the Gospel  of John. Yet, as authors throughout the centuries note, the story of  Lazarus is far from a simple story. Lazarus, out of all people in the  Bible, receives the epithet of “friend of Jesus.” Even with this  friendship, Jesus hears of his friend’s sickness but waits two days  before he visits. When he visits four days after the death of Lazarus he  resurrects his friend and leaves him again. 
 The Bible only provides hints at the complex relationship  between these friends, and commentators, writers, artists, and musicians  throughout the generation have attempted to create their own narrative  through the Biblical ambiguities. Beard finds himself in a long line of  illustrious artists including Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Van Gogh,  Dostoevsky, and T.S. Eliot. Classically, the story and image of Lazarus  have carried so much power and weight because people associate Lazarus  with resurrection. Yet Beard, sensing the human drama in the  relationship between these friends, crafts a masterful story which fills  in the holes in the story through a focus on the tension between human  desires and religious destiny. Here Beard captures the character of  Lazarus right before he describes his resurrection: 
He sold blemished lambs at the temple. He cheated shepherds  and made compulsive visits to a prostitute. He was insensitive and  self-important, he was beloved and he was dead.
 
 This piece aptly displays Beard’s talent and vision. He  takes a dry Biblical character and resurrects his own Lazarus. The  Bible, especially in the New Testament, lacks dynamic characters and  characterization, instead focusing on moral lessons. In that one  sentence, “He was insensitive and self important, he was beloved,” Beard  changes everything about the story. Now we see a flawed human, not a  god, or a divine object, or a resurrected relic. (Beard explains that  many lesser known traditions saw Lazarus as divine in some sense because  of the resurrection. Certains sects treat Lazarus as a saint, while  legends abound in these cultures as to the complementary greatness of  Lazarus, Jesus’ only named friend. Beard uses this esoteric tradition to  depict Lazarus’ return from death as burdensome because of the public  clamoring for a divine dispatch from the land of souls.)
 Jesus and Lazarus, in Beard’s version, grew up together.  Lazarus, more outspoken, charismatic, and rebellious, foresaw a great  future from these two ambitious friends. Beard uses their childhood  friendship for much of the humor and irony in the story. Time and time  again people obsessed with Jesus ask Lazarus, “What is Jesus really  like? You’re his friend,” and each time Lazarus replies, “Slow at  climbing,” or, “Hopeless at swimming.” Beard here captures the  complexity of a religious figure in which we deign to “know” but don’t  know in any human sense of a relationship. When we forget the humanity  of our religious figures, when we move into idolatry, we lose much of  their beauty, Beard contends. 
 Tragedy then tears them apart. Lazarus’ little brother Amos  follows the two older boys around and attempts to do everything his  older brother does. One day, while swimming, Amos follows Lazarus into  the water only to drown. Lazarus attempts to save his brother and Jesus,  unable to swim and as yet unable to perform miracles, stands idly by. 
 The friends grow apart, separated by the trauma and Jesus’s  inaction, as they grow into disparate lifestyles. Lazarus provides  blemished sheep to the Temple service (which according to law cannot use  blemished sheep), while Jesus spends his day studying, learning  scripture and engaged in devout prayer. When Lazarus falls sick, he  rejects any suggestions to elicit the help of his old friend. Instead,  he suffers through the rest of his days emitting the noxious smell of  decay. He dies unceremoniously and then awakes from the dead at the  behest of Jesus, only to find a resurrected life even more complicated  than the first go around. 
 Beard uses these tensions to craft a pitch-perfect tone of  world-weariness, humor, and a thread of hope. He gives voice to the  unvoiced character of Lazarus and thereby rests the story back from the  focus on Jesus. In fact, in a brilliant move, Beard removes all voice  from Jesus. Jesus never speaks once, which is perhaps both a respectful  technique, but also a statement. So much of the Bible focuses on Jesus  and his disciples’ reactions to Jesus. We hear nothing of those not  involved in a central manner. We get but one perspective, the  perspective of Christ in his moral grandeur. Beard, in robbing Jesus of  his voice, appears to say, “We’ve heard enough from Jesus, let’s see  what others have to say.” 
 Part history, part novel, and part religious reflection, Beard  amalgamates scripture, commentaries, and his own essayistic asides to  create a thoughtful, moving, poetic, and aching portrayal of an attempt  to grapple with basic religious questions, with a focus on theodicy,  both on the part of Lazarus the character and Beard the narrator. 
 In a sense, I can understand how some might see this as a  subversive text. Beard retells a beloved tale of a character that many  see as St. Lazarus. He, like most of our generation, doesn’t view the  bible as divine. Despite this, Beard through reinvigorating this classic  tale with humanity, with contemporary relevance doesn’t subvert, but  supports the continued relevance of the bible as a religious text, even  if not divine. He makes a case with each page of this small but  compelling book for a re-engagement with the most famous and  foundational text of our culture not through a recycling of traditional  moralistic stories, but through an embodiment of the details left out:  of what friendship with a purported messiah looks like, of how to  forgive a God for inaction, of what friends might talk about after one  resurrects the other (Hi?). It is a wholly original yet deeply rooted  effort full of insight and beauty that deserves our attention. 
 --Joe Winkler