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Book review: Last Instruction

The Last Instructions for this book should have been don't publish and don't read, says Jenni Frazer

April 17, 2019 10:03
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1 min read

In some ways, I have to admire Israeli Nir Hezroni — or his agent. To have persuaded a publisher to destroy trees for his new book Last Instructions Point Blank, £8.99 (translated by Steven Cohen), and his previous outing, Three Envelopes, takes chutzpah of an extraordinary degree, and self-belief to a whole new level.

Mr Hezroni, who, he would have us know, studied physics in high school — which is just about as arresting a piece of information as my own biology O-level grade, back in the day — has produced this eye-watering, nigh unreadable package, which purports to be the story of a rogue Israeli spy gone mad.

Right off the bat, a decision has been taken between author, translator and publisher to blind the reader with pages in italics — possibly to denote “thinking” — and, even worse, to style “secret” memoranda on black pages with reverse white type.

The distraction from any sort of progressive narrative may well be deliberate, since there is almost no story-telling in the accepted sense of the word.