While in the refugee camps, Herman had fallen in love with Masha, whom he meets again in New York and with whom he carries on a consuming affair (later in the book he will marry her, too). Yadwiga and Masha are, in part, male fantasies: the first pure but simple, the second ravishing but histrionic. Herman’s conscience prevents him from leaving Yadwiga; his passion prevents him from leaving Masha. This brings much misery all around, but Singer does not let us hate Herman too much because we see how the capricious horror of the Holocaust has left him a fatalist with no confidence that his decisions can affect the course of his life. Moreover, Herman is amply punished for his duplicity by a life of high anxiety, which Singer portrays with comic, at times sadistic, relish.

  The cruel joke continues when Herman learns that he has even more of too much of a good thing. It turns out that his first wife survived the Nazi bullet and escaped to Russia; she has moved to New York and is staying with her pious elderly uncle and aunt. Every Jew in the postwar period knows of emotional reunions of the survivors of Holocaust-ravaged families, but the reunion of a husband and a wife whom he had given up for dead is a scene of almost unimaginable poignancy. Herman enters the apartment of Reb Abraham:

  ABRAHAM: A miracle from heaven, Broder, a miracle… Your wife has returned.

  [Abraham leaves. Tamara enters.]

  TAMARA: Hello, Herman.

  HERMAN: I didn’t know that you were alive.

  TAMARA: That’s something you never knew.

  HERMAN: It’s as if you’ve risen from the dead.

  TAMARA: We were dumped in an open pit. They thought we were all dead. But I crawled over some corpses and escaped at night. How is it my uncle didn’t know where you were—we had to put an advertisement in the paper?

  HERMAN: I don’t have my own apartment. I live with someone else.

  TAMARA: What do you do? Where do you live?

  HERMAN: I didn’t know you were alive and—

  TAMARA[smiles]: Who is the lucky woman who has taken my place?

  HERMAN [stunned; then replies]: She was our servant. You knew her… Yadwiga.

  TAMARA [about to laugh]: You married her? Forgive me, but wasn’t she simple-minded? She didn’t even know how to put on a pair of shoes. I remember your mother telling me how she tried to put the left shoe on the right foot. If she was given money to buy something, she would lose it.

  HERMAN: She saved my life.

  TAMARA: Was there no other way to repay her? Well, I’d better not ask. Do you have any children by her? HERMAN: No.

  TAMARA: It wouldn’t shock me if you did. I assumed you crawled into bed with her even when you were with me.

  HERMAN: That’s nonsense. I never crawled into bed with her—

  TAMARA: Oh, really. Well we never really did have a marriage. All we ever did was argue. You never had any respect for me, for my ideas—

  HERMAN: That’s not true. You know that—

  ABRAHAM [enters the room, addresses Herman]: You may stay with us until you find an apartment. Hospitality is an act of charity, and besides, you are relatives. As the Holy Book says, “And thou shalt not hide thyself from thine own flesh.”

  TAMARA [interrupting]: Uncle, he has another wife.16

  Yes, within seconds of the miraculous reunion they are bickering, picking up from where they left off when they were separated a decade before. What a wealth of psychology is folded into that scene! Men’s inclination to polygamy and the frustrations it inevitably brings. Women’s keener social intelligence and their preference for verbal over physical aggression against romantic rivals. The stability of personality over the lifespan. The way that social behavior is elicited by the specifics of a situation, especially the specifics of other people, so that two people play out the same dynamic whenever they are together.

  Though it is a scene of considerable sadness, it has a streak of sly humor, as we watch these pathetic souls forgo their chance to savor a moment of rare good fortune and slip instead into petty quarreling. And Singer’s biggest joke is on us. Dramatic conventions, and a belief in cosmic justice, lead us to expect that suffering has ennobled these characters and that we are about to witness a scene of great drama and pathos. Instead we are shown what we ought to have expected all along: real human beings with all their follies. Nor is the episode a display of cynicism or misanthropy: we are not surprised when later in the story Herman and Tamara share moments of tenderness, or that a wise Tamara will offer him his only chance at redemption. It is a scene that has the voice of the species in it: that infuriating, endearing, mysterious, predictable, and eternally fascinating thing we call human nature.

  APPENDIX

  Donald E. Brown’s List of Human Universals

  THIS LIST, COMPILED in 1989 and published in 1991, consists primarily of “surface” universals of behavior and overt language noted by ethnographers. It does not list deeper universals of mental structure that are revealed by theory and experiments. It also omits near-universals (traits that most, but not all, cultures show) and conditional universals (“If a culture has trait A, it always has trait B”). A list of items added since 1989 is provided at the end. For discussion and references, see Brown’s Human Universals (1991) and his entry for “Human Universals” in The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (Wilson & Keil, 1999).

  abstraction in speech and thought

  actions under self-control distinguished from those not under control

  aesthetics

  affection expressed and felt

  age grades

  age statuses

  age terms

  ambivalence

  anthropomorphization

  antonyms

  baby talk

  belief in supernatural/religion

  beliefs, false

  beliefs about death

  beliefs about disease

  beliefs about fortune and misfortune

  binary cognitive distinctions

  biological mother and social mother normally the same person

  black (color term)

  body adornment

  childbirth customs

  childcare

  childhood fears

  childhood fear of loud noises

  childhood fear of strangers

  choice making (choosing alternatives)

  classification

  classification of age

  classification of behavioral propensities

  classification of body parts

  classification of colors

  classification of fauna

  classification of flora

  classification of inner states

  classification of kin

  classification of sex

  classification of space

  classification of tools

  classification of weather conditions

  coalitions

  collective identities

  conflict

  conflict, consultation to deal with

  conflict, means of dealing with

  conflict, mediation of

  conjectural reasoning

  containers

  continua (ordering as cognitive pattern)

  contrasting marked and nonmarked sememes (meaningful elements in language)

  cooking

  cooperation

  cooperative labor

  copulation normally conducted in privacy

  corporate (perpetual) statuses

  coyness display

  crying

  cultural variability

  culture

  culture/nature distinction

  customary greetings

  daily routines

  dance

  death rituals

  decision making

  decision making, collective

  directions, giving of

  discrepancies between speech, thought, and action

  dispersed groups

  distinguishing right and wrong

  diurnality

  divination

/>   division of labor

  division of labor by age

  division of labor by sex

  dreams

  dream interpretation

  economic inequalities

  economic inequalities, consciousness of

  emotions

  empathy

  entification (treating patterns and relations as things)

  environment, adjustments to

  envy

  envy, symbolic means of coping with

  ethnocentrism

  etiquette

  explanation

  face (word for)

  facial communication

  facial expression of anger

  facial expression of contempt

  facial expression of disgust

  facial expression of fear

  facial expression of happiness

  facial expression of sadness

  facial expression of surprise

  facial expressions, masking/modifying of

  family (or household)

  father and mother, separate kin terms for

  fears

  fears, ability to overcome some

  feasting

  females do more direct childcare

  figurative speech

  fire

  folklore

  food preferences

  food sharing

  future, attempts to predict

  generosity admired

  gestures

  gift giving

  good and bad distinguished

  gossip

  government

  grammar

  group living

  groups that are not based on family

  hairstyles

  hand (word for)

  healing the sick (or attempting to)

  hospitality

  hygienic care

  identity, collective

  incest between mother and son unthinkable or tabooed

  incest, prevention or avoidance

  in-group distinguished from out-group(s)

  in-group, biases in favor of

  inheritance rules

  insulting

  intention

  interest in bioforms (living things or things that resemble them)

  interpreting behavior

  intertwining (e.g., weaving)

  jokes

  kin, close distinguished from distant

  kin groups

  kin terms translatable by basic relations of procreation

  kinship statuses

  language

  language employed to manipulate others

  language employed to misinform or mislead

  language is translatable

  language not a simple reflection of reality

  language, prestige from proficient use of

  law (rights and obligations)

  law (rules of membership)

  leaders

  lever

  linguistic redundancy

  logical notions

  logical notion of “and”

  logical notion of “equivalent”

  logical notion of “general/particular”

  logical notion of “not”

  logical notion of “opposite”

  logical notion of “part/whole”

  logical notion of “same”

  magic

  magic to increase life

  magic to sustain life

  magic to win love

  male and female and adult and child seen as having different natures

  males dominate public/political realm

  males more aggressive

  males more prone to lethal violence

  males more prone to theft

  manipulate social relations

  marking at phonemic, syntactic, and lexical levels

  marriage

  materialism

  meal times

  meaning, most units of are non-universal

  measuring

  medicine

  melody

  memory

  metaphor

  metonym

  mood- or consciousness-altering techniques and/or substances

  morphemes

  mother normally has consort during child-rearing years

  mourning

  murder proscribed

  music

  music, children’s

  music related in part to dance

  music related in part to religious activity

  music seen as art (a creation)

  music, vocal

  music, vocal, includes speech forms

  musical redundancy

  musical repetition

  musical variation

  myths

  narrative

  nomenclature (perhaps the same as classification)

  nonbodily decorative art

  normal distinguished from abnormal states

  nouns

  numerals (counting)

  Oedipus complex

  oligarchy (de facto)

  one (numeral)

  onomatopoeia

  overestimating objectivity of thought

  pain

  past/present/future

  person, concept of

  personal names

  phonemes

  phonemes defined by sets of minimally contrasting features

  phonemes, merging of

  phonemes, range from 10 to 70 in number

  phonemic change, inevitability of

  phonemic change, rules of

  phonemic system

  planning

  planning for future

  play

  play to perfect skills

  poetry/rhetoric

  poetic line, uniform length range

  poetic lines characterized by repetition and variation

  poetic lines demarcated by pauses

  polysemy (one word has several related meanings)

  possessive, intimate

  possessive, loose

  practice to improve skills

  preference for own children and close kin (nepotism)

  prestige inequalities

  private inner life

  promise

  pronouns

  pronouns, minimum two numbers

  pronouns, minimum three persons

  proper names

  property

  psychological defense mechanisms

  rape

  rape proscribed

  reciprocal exchanges (of labor, goods, or services)

  reciprocity, negative (revenge, retaliation)

  reciprocity, positive

  recognition of individuals by face

  redress of wrongs

  rhythm

  right-handedness as population norm

  rites of passage

  rituals

  role and personality seen in dynamic interrelationship (i.e., departures from role can be explained in terms of individual personality)

  sanctions

  sanctions for crimes against the collectivity

  sanctions include removal from the social unit

  self distinguished from other

  self as neither wholly passive nor wholly autonomous

  self as subject and object

  self is responsible

  semantics

  semantic category of affecting things and people

  semantic category of dimension

  semantic category of giving

  semantic category of location

  semantic category of motion

  semantic category of speed

  semantic category of other physical properties

  semantic components

  semantic components, generation

  semantic components, sex

  sememes, commonly used ones are short, infrequently used ones are longer

  senses unified

  sex (gender) terminology is fundamentally binary

  sex statuses

  sexual attraction

  sexual att
ractiveness

  sexual jealousy

  sexual modesty

  sexual regulation

  sexual regulation includes incest prevention

  sexuality as focus of interest

  shelter

  sickness and death seen as related

  snakes, wariness around

  social structure

  socialization

  socialization expected from senior kin

  socialization includes toilet training

  spear

  special speech for special occasions

  statuses and roles

  statuses, ascribed and achieved

  statuses distinguished from individuals

  statuses on other than sex, age, or kinship bases

  stop/nonstop contrasts (in speech sounds)

  succession

  sweets preferred

  symbolism

  symbolic speech

  synonyms

  taboos

  tabooed foods

  tabooed utterances

  taxonomy

  territoriality

  time

  time, cyclicity of

  tools

  tool dependency

  tool making

  tools for cutting

  tools to make tools

  tools patterned culturally

  tools, permanent

  tools for pounding

  trade

  triangular awareness (assessing relationships among the self and two other people)

  true and false distinguished

  turn-taking

  two (numeral)

  tying material (i.e., something like string)

  units of time

  verbs

  violence, some forms of proscribed

  visiting

  vocalic/nonvocalic contrasts in phonemes

  vowel contrasts

  weaning

  weapons

  weather control (attempts to)

  white (color term)

  world view

  Additions Since 1989

  Anticipation

  attachment

  critical learning periods

  differential valuations

  dominance/submission

  fairness (equity), concept of

  fear of death

  habituation

  hope

  husband older than wife on average

  imagery

  institutions (organized co-activities)

  intention

  interpolation

  judging others

  likes and dislikes

  making comparisons

  males, on average, travel greater distances over lifetime

  males engage in more coalitional violence

  mental maps

  mentalese

  moral sentiments

  moral sentiments, limited effective range of