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Book review: The Tunnel

A B Yehoshua's most recent novels are about characters approaching old age. His latest deals with the onset of dementia.

June 23, 2020 11:39
A B Yehoshua
1 min read

The Tunnel by A. B. Yehoshua (Halban, £12.99)

A B Yehoshua was born in Jerusalem in 1936. He is one of the last of that great generation of Israeli writers born in the 1930s that included Aharon Appelfeld, Joshua Sobol and Amos Oz.

His most recent novels are about characters approaching old age. In The Retrospective (2011), an Israeli film director in his seventies attends a retrospective of his films. The Extra (2014) tells the story of an elderly widow trying to choose whether to live out the rest of her life in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv. Yehoshua’s new novel, The Tunnel, is about Zvi Luria, a road engineer in his seventies, trying to deal with the onset of dementia.

All three novels are about old age, but they are also about Israel, the past and history. Luria’s wife persuades her husband to offer his services to a younger engineer, Asael Maimoni, to help with a project to build a secret road for military use in the desert, in southern Israel.