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Spilling secrets: Novelist Eshkol Nevo

Liam Hoare asks Israeli author Eshkol Nevo about his new book Three Floors Up

April 24, 2018 13:33
Eshkol-Nevo-by-Moti-Kikayon
2 min read

Speaking in the middle of a fraught promotional tour in Germany, Israeli author Eshkol Nevo tells me that he wasn’t even planning a new novel when the first of three voices that comprise his latest, Three Floors Up, came to him. Arnon arrived like “a character barging into your room,” he says, describing Arnon further as someone who “tells you his secrets”.

The story is set inside an anonymous, suburban Tel Aviv apartment building where, on the first floor, the wheels are falling off Arnon’s life; his marriage and family are disintegrating. Hani, on the second floor, is disrupted by the unexpected arrival of her husband’s brother, a financial con man. Above them both, on the third floor, Deborah, a retired judge, finds herself swept up in the city’s social-justice movement.

Although the finished novel seems very structured, Nevo found one confession following another, prompting six months of intense writing and re-writing. It coincided with a time in Nevo’s life when he “knew a lot of secrets”— either from conversations with friends or letters from readers. Fundamental questions arose in Nevo’s mind about whom we choose to tell our secrets to, and why; and about loneliness. The latter issue, Nevo says pointedly, is one especially pertinent to a writer’s life.

The result is a highly charged novel, propelled by a sense of urgency pervading a deeply disturbed city of damaged inhabitants, hurrying to confess.