Minggu, 20 Februari 2011

[A490.Ebook] Ebook Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo

Ebook Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo

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Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo

Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo



Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo

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Homesick (Hebrew Literature Series), by Eshkol Nevo

Moving from character to character, perspective to perspective, Homesick is a complex and moving portrait of parallel lives and failing love in a time of permanent war.

  • Sales Rank: #473009 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Dalkey Archive Press
  • Published on: 2010-04-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 1.25" w x 5.25" l, .98 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 374 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In his second book in English translation, popular Israeli novelist Nevo pays tribute to the dynamism of his country, honing in on a handful of neighbors in the town of Mevasseret, just outside Jerusalem, whose Arab inhabitants were displaced in 1948. The novel is narrated from multiple perspectives; each intense personality describes the struggle to embrace the tension of everyday life in Israel and come to terms with the law of the preservation of sadness. Noa and Amir are a young couple—he a psychology student and she a photography student—adjusting to life together under the same roof; landlords Moshe and Sima in the apartment next door clash over the appropriate religious upbringing of their children. Across the lot a family mourns the loss of a son to the war in Lebanon, and nearby, the Arab Madmonis family faces prejudice on a daily basis. While death and social isolation hover over many scenes, Nevo masterfully explores the dualities of life in Israel, and delicately draws out the hope and love submerged in the hearts of its citizens. (Apr.)
Copyright � Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Shifting characters and perspectives, this multilayered novel looks at the lives of a handful of neighbors in the small Israeli town of Mevasseret. It’s 1995 and Amir, a college student studying psychology in Tel Aviv, and Noa, a photography student attending classes in Jerusalem, move together into a small apartment. A passionate couple, they nonetheless find themselves struggling to adjust to their new life in the same room. Their landlords, Sima and Moshe, share the thin walls in the apartment next door, and their marriage is tested when they disagree on the religious upbringing of their two young children. A few houses away, a family is devastated over the death of their eldest son. The neglected brother, Yotam, finds solace in a budding friendship with the introspective Amir. And there is the mysterious Arab construction worker determined to return to his childhood home after being displaced along with the village’s other Arab inhabitants in 1948. Nevo’s characters are diverse, yet their desires, histories, and interactions blend seamlessly to create an engrossing portrait of a restless community. --Leah Strauss

Review
“A deeply human book, suffused with desire and melancholy.” (Jerusalem Post)

“Nevo has created an engrossing work. . . . This is a compelling novel which I never wanted to end.” (Julia Pascal - The Independent)

“The novel’s heartfelt bass note is the beauty and difficulty of human relationships, evoked with sympathy and an ear for the nuances of different voices which is as playful as it is precise.” (Times Literary Supplement)

“A warm, wise and sophisticated novel. I read it with much pleasure.” (Amos Oz, author of A Tale of Love and Darkness)

Most helpful customer reviews

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Eshkol Nevo captured the feeling of home in this book
By K. O'donnell
I bought this book as I was looking for a book in English (as I can't read Hebrew) about every day people living in Israel since I've been visiting Israel. I wanted to get more of a feel for the people and their lives. plus I've been feeling homesick for my own country and home. many of the places and things mentioned in the book were very familiar to me since my stay here and the characters seem like friends now. at first I found it hard to work out who was speaking as all the characters say "I" - they are each telling their own story in first person throughout the book. once I got used to this the characters grew on me. I loved the simple details mentioned in the book about everyday life and I have a mental picture about them living their lives now. I'll be keeping an eye out for more books by the author as I really enjoyed this one and recommend it to anyone who would like to read about life in Israel (ie not the media-portrayed view of Israel)

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
A novel for people who want to go home again
By T. M. Teale
This novel requires courage to read since the "ideological" freight might be heavy for some readers, my fellow Americans. Originally published in Hebrew, in Israel, in 2004, this novel may be hard to find in the U.S. (The copy I have is a 2008 English translation, Vintage U.K. Random House.) I wanted to read this novel, Homesick, ever since I first heard about it in a review in the London Times Literary Supplement.) The fact that the author is Jewish and native to Israel interested me--and I'd never read a novel set in Israel--but also because there is a Muslim Arab character, Saddiq, a construction worker who is hardly in the novel but his presence is everywhere--which I will explain. The setting is a small village, Mevasseret or "Castel," halfway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. The geography as a setting plays no role in this novel, and I think the reader will see that the novel is about the psychological landscape and the two or three houses in which the action unfolds.

The energy of the novel circulates around the personal and interpersonal conflicts of two couples living in a partitioned house, so close that they can hear the arguments--and other things--and smell the cooking. One couple, about 30-ish, has been married seven or eight years, Sima and Moshe Zakian; they are renting out a smaller portion of their house to the younger unmarried couple, Noa, a photography student, and Amir, a psychology student. Also crucial are Moshe's parents, living upstairs, the 70-ish Avram and Gina.

In a way, this is Noa's novel, the female photography student who looks for homesickness in everyone's face--including Arab residents.

A third (or fourth) couple--living in a house across an empty lot--plays a key role because their pre-teen son, Yotam, befriends Amir, who has become a kind of surrogate brother because Yotam's older brother, Gidi, was killed in the war in Lebanon. The novel plays out along many tensions between these three houses. Yotam's parents are deeply mourning the lost of their son, Gidi; this topic of war allows the author to explore the cost of military service and his nation's constant fear, as well as the constant mourning which makes the parents neglect their boy, Yotam. Also, Moshe Zakian's brother is "orthodox" Jewish (a fundamentalist) who brings about tension because Sima refuses to send their five-year-old son to an orthodox school. The novel shows that there are obviously different ways of being Jewish.

But, at one point, the key to the novel is literally a key. One of the Arab Muslim construction workers--working on a house across from Sima and Moshe Zakian (and Noa and Amir)--suspects that the Zakian house is the one that he and his Palestinian family owned until 1948 when they were evicted. Saddiq has the key to the front door and the property deed showing that it is their house; the family was, of course, forcibly removed, and they left in a hurry, the mother leaving something valuable during their flight in '48. The reader can imagine that there will be tension if the Arab knocks on their door and wants to go in to find what his mother left; even if the Arab has a good explanation and shows them the key and the property deed, he might be met with suspicion. These scenes are loaded with irony and subtext. It becomes obvious that only the old grandfather upstairs can understand the Arab, and he does that in a moment of "insanity" while he's recovering from an operation.

At first I thought that it must have taken the Jewish author, Eshkol Nevo, a lot of courage to write the novel, but then I realized that writing it was natural for him. Nevo has simply written his life, written what he knows. It's the reader who requires courage. The reader has got to be able to see that there are all kinds of Israeli people and that Arabs and Jews already share the land, that their histories and their lives are intertwined. This novel, Homesick, is the history and sociology behind the nightly news. This novel does what only a novel can do: show us a kind of truth missing from all other media.

To summarize, very character has something personal that each is hiding from others; giving up concealment can be difficult, speaking out can be frightening. It's a big step when people realize they can love each other.

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Wonderful book
By Joshua Hershberg
Sensitively written, well crafted, believable characters. Truly a window into Israeli life, but with universal themes of longing, pain, and struggle.

See all 14 customer reviews...

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