Become a Member
Books

Review: The Hilltop

Settlers' story that is not unsettling enough

November 6, 2014 14:07
Gavron: well-meaning portrayals

By

David Herman,

David Herman

1 min read

By Assaf Gavron (Trans: Steven Cohen)
Oneworld, £16.99

Born in 1968, Assaf Gavron is part of the same generation of Israeli writers as Etgar Keret and Eshkol Nevo. All three were born between the Six-Day War and the Yom Kippur War. The Hilltop is Gavron's fifth novel and has received considerable acclaim in Israel.

It is a big, ambitious, state-of-nation novel, which tries to combine the stories of a group of settlers on the West Bank, with the fault-lines in modern-day Israel. Gavron presents the settlers as ordinary people, preoccupied with their daily lives, trying to deal with the problems of generators breaking down, family life, and a government which sees them only as a problem.

Only two, Josh from Brooklyn and crazy Neta Hirchson, conform to the media stereotypes. Both, however, are over-the-top, one-dimensional characters.