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Review: Friendly Fire

Yehoshua maps the dark side of everyday Israel.

October 23, 2008 10:09
AB Yehoshua:  raises deeply moral questions beneath a mundane surface.

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By AB Yehoshua
Halban, £12.99 

It is more than 50 years since AB Yehoshua published his first short stories. He belongs to a generation of Israeli writers who, in his words, helped "consolidate and mould the Israeli identity". Yehoshua recently wrote a fascinating essay about this generation (which also included Appelfeld and Oz). The reason they spoke to readers, he said, is because of the balance they found between "the revealed and the hidden".

That balance is at the heart of Yehoshua's new novel, about a family in Israel today. On the surface, everything about them is ordinary. Daniela is a middle-aged English teacher in Tel Aviv; her husband Ya'ari is a lift engineer. She goes on a trip to Africa to visit her brother-in-law, Yirmi. Her sister has recently died and Daniela feels that she has unfinished business there. Her husband stays behind to look after his business and help with the grandchildren. The chapters alternate: one story follows her trip and what she discovers, the other stays with him in Israel.

Whole chapters go by and little happens. Ya'ari is called to investigate a lift that doesn't work or looks after his grandchildren. The style, too, is deliberately flat. At one point, Daniela's brother-in-law launches a passionate defence of "simple Hebrew" against the "linguistic decoration" of the Hebrew Bible. Daniela feels that the novel she is reading "is gearing up for an absurd twist". But there are no absurd twists or fancy language here.