In 1973, Peter Jameson was nineteen years old and preparing to conquer the world with his band, the Master Planets. Then echoes of his Holocaust ancestry swept in. The twin ordeals of having to deal with rapacious, dope-addled music executives while simultaneously coming to terms with his Jewish mother’s bloody past are the engines that drive this story. The background, as Gallinger lays it out, is this: Peter’s father, a Presbyterian doctor with the U. S. Army, rescues a woman who identifies herself as Rachel Arenberg from one of Hitler’s death camps. The two marry and settle down in Sea Ridge, New Jersey, where he sets up a practice and she opens a flower shop. Their first child is a daughter, Penny. Three years later Peter is born. At the age of nine, he discovers the Beatles and ten years hence is fronting and writing songs for his own band.
Idyllic and All-American as this may sound, Peter sees some ominous clouds. His mother drinks too much, keeps a psychological distance from her children and husband and demonstrates a capability—even a zeal—for violence, as when she expertly overpowers and then brutalizes a drug addict who attempts to rob her store. Just as Peter is immersing himself in ironing out a recording contract and a tour schedule for the Master Planets, a stranger appears at the family’s door who seems to know his mother well and who refers to her familiarly as “Leah.” The consequences of this incident will, in the long run, do more to mark the course of Peter’s life than his beloved music.
Apart from Peter (who narrates the story) and his demon-haunted mother, Gallinger’s most fully realized character is the patient, all-knowing Daniel Gilaad, now an Israeli ambassador but once a Polish resistance fighter alongside Peter’s mother. Each new conversation between the two men reveals more of the mother’s shadowy past. When Peter reluctantly sheds his rock ‘n’ roll dream to become a conniving real estate lawyer, it is Gilaad who serves as his de facto moral compass.
Gallinger deftly orchestrates this clash between the glitzy, egocentric rock world that first enchants Peter and the grim, self-sacrificing world his mother was forced to confront—and he does so without distorting or minimizing the significance of either. With its smooth shifts from the balmy Jersey shores to the frozen Polish forests, this intriguing tale reads like a movie in embryo.
If interested, you may read the first chapter of the book here:
http://donaldgallinger.com/the-master-planets.html
To look at the suggested discussion questions:
http://donaldgallinger.com/book-discussion-questions.html
As mentioned, the author is delighted to meet whenever humanly possible with groups discussing his book. If your group plans to include THE MASTER PLANETS on its reading list and thinks it would like to invite Donald to the discussion, you may contact him at (609) 926-8194.