David Grossman's 'See Under: Love' is a formally daring novel about how the Holocaust haunts subsequent generations, told through four interconnected sections that range from realist fiction to mythic fantasy. The central figure is Momik, a child of survivors in 1950s Israel who becomes 'infected with humanity' through listening to stories his traumatized relatives cannot fully tell. Growing up surrounded by silence and fragments, Momik develops an obsessive relationship with the catastrophe that preceded his birth. The novel's subsequent sections become increasingly experimental, including a fictional encyclopedia of a Warsaw Ghetto author and an extended fable about a death camp inmate who becomes immortal. Grossman, one of Israel's most important living writers, refuses to approach the Holocaust through conventional realist narration, insisting that its magnitude demands new forms. The novel is demanding, requiring readers to accept radical shifts in style and mode, but rewards patience with passages of extraordinary power. Grossman explores how trauma transmits across generations, how imagination both betrays and honors terrible history, and how love persists even in circumstances designed to extinguish it. Readers willing to engage with experimental fiction about the most difficult of subjects will find a masterwork.