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American Evil


Article # : 17503 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1990  2,250 Words
Author : Richard Lourie
Richard Lourie is the author of Sakharov: A Biography.

       WHAT LISA KNEW
       The Truths and Lies of the Steinberg Case
       Joyce Johnson
       New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1990
       304 pp., $19.95
       
        Joyce Johnson has taken a long, unflinching look at human evil, and this book is her report from the heart of darkness.
       
        The Steinberg case achieved immediate notoriety and a permanent place in the mythology of these ignoble times. A first grader, Lisa Steinberg, died because of abuse by her parents, who were not married and had adopted her illegally. The "father" was Joel Steinberg, a white, middle-class New York lawyer; the "mother" was Hedda Nussbaum, once a writer of children's books and a children's editor at Random House. He was someone you might have gone to law school with, and, if your children read the Charlie Brown books, she had a hand in their education.
       
        The case was electrifying because the villains were us.
       
        Lisa Steinberg did not die at once but lay between life and death for twelve hours while her parents did nothing to save her. When they finally called 911, all the official personnel involved noticed the lack of what has to be the most universal of emotions, a parent's anguish for a child in danger. Hedda and Joel were no longer human. A hundred philosophical questions about our nature are raised at once.
       
        These Times
       
        One of the most frightening things about Joel Steinberg and Hedda Nussbaum is that they not only were of our world but were taking the highroad:
       
        Spontaneous, natural, free, these benign but essentially amoral words, so much the credo of the 1970s, had different meanings for different people. You owed it to yourself to be yourself, but many were quite uninterested in what obligations they had beyond that. Hedd Nussbaum was thrilled when Joel talked of freeing her because she had always imagined she was a superior being. Only now was her true self being discovered. Finally, she had met a man who instinctively seemed to recognize that the earnest school-teacherish young woman who had sought the approval of so many people was really only a cowardly
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