A.B. Yehoshua has been called "Israel's Faulkner," but his beautiful writing leads me to think of him as "Israel's Vargas Llosa." This story could certainly have been written by the Peruvian Nobelist. It is built as if by a master cabinetmaker and includes the feature that no one is named (except by occupation or relation) other than the woman at the heart of the story, a foreigner living in Jerusalem who was killed in a terrorist attack and whose body lay unclaimed until a weekly scandal sheet takes to task her employer for ignoring her. The journey into eastern Europe by the personnel manager of the company to return the body to its home soil becomes, first, an adventure, and then something deeper.
Sunday, July 31, 2016
Sunday, July 24, 2016
The Voice Imitator
Thomas Bernhard's book of 104 stories in 104 pages is filled with his usual mix of gloom, suicide, and alienation. Some of the stories hold a reader's attention long after he has put the book down; others are more ephemeral; all highlight Bernhard's distinctive voice and acid wit.
Saturday, July 23, 2016
Mr. Mani
Mr. Mani is a multi-generational saga by A.B. Yehoshua, centered around Jerusalem and told in an unusual way: as conversations between two people, with one partner's words missing, and running in reverse chronological order. The reverse chronology suits the material beautifully, resulting in a feeling of almost archaeological discovery as deeper layers are revealed. The silent partner in the conversation is a device that works less well because it often calls attention to itself when the speaker repeats a question. Still, this is a rich and satisfying family chronicle.
Monday, July 18, 2016
Night
It probably shouldn't have taken Elie Wiesel's death to get me to read his work, but there you are. Night is notable for its clear-eyed, merciless clarity.
Monday, July 11, 2016
Notes on the Death of Culture
The typical problem with declinist polemics is fogeyism combined with a failure to establish that the "golden age" — from which current society has supposedly fallen so far — actually existed. There is a bit of this in Mario Vargas Llosa's collection of essays, but for the most part he makes a strong case that the culture of entertainment has been destructive both to the individual and to democratic institutions.
Sunday, July 10, 2016
The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold
Evelyn Waugh's novel is based on his own experience of drug-induced hallucinations. While it is very funny, there is an undercurrent of unease in the verbal attacks by imagined enemies on Pinfold's character. Because after all, these attacks are coming from Pinfold's own subconscious.
Monday, July 4, 2016
Murder in Greenwich
Mark Fuhrman lays out in meticulous detail the events surrounding the 1975 murder of 15-year-old Martha Moxley in Greenwich, Connecticut. Written in the late 1990s, before the trial and conviction of Michael Skakel, a Kennedy cousin, for the murder, Furhman presents an ironclad case for Skakel's guilt and a damning indictment of the Greenwich police for incompetence.
Saturday, July 2, 2016
End of Watch
Eighty percent of the sentences in this Stephen King novel, the concluding volume of a trilogy, are bad: mostly laden with cliches or hackneyed metaphors. The dialogue is cutesy to the point of being inhuman. And as in the other books in this series, King drains suspense away by having characters puzzling over incidents that the reader already understands. King was a lousy writer when I gave up on Salem's Lot decades ago after about 50 pages, and he's a lousy writer still.
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