It is narrated by the Biblical King
David of
Israel, and purports to be his deathbed
memoirs; however, this David does not recount his life in a straightforward fashion, and the storyline is often fractured. Indeed, it is possible to read the book as Heller's meditation upon his own mortality, and an exploration of the Jewish view of family, life, death, etc. All of the major touchstones of King David's life are in place: his childhood herding sheep, the prophet
Samuel,
Goliath, King
Saul,
Jonathan (and
homosexual innuendoes),
Bathsheba and
Uriah, the
Psalms, the treachery of
Absalom,
Solomon, etc. At some points, David betrays knowledge of the future (he mentions
Michelangelo's
David, saying it is ironic that a King of the Jews should stand there uncircumcised), and even of heaven (Moses sits on a rock in the afterworld, working on his stutter) – we are left to guess whether or not this stems from his special relationship with God, as no answers are forthcoming. == Reception ==