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Winter in Jerusalem

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Sydney Allen & Unwin 2012Description: 318 pISBN:
  • 9781743312230
DDC classification:
  • F/ DAL
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Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Colombo F/ DAL Available

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Shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize CA00027729
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A story of an Australian screenwriter in quest of her past as she returns to Israel, the land of her birth.

19.99 AUD

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

D'Alpuget delineates a culture and its inhabitants as few authors do. In Turtle Beach ( LJ 10/15/83) it was Malaysia; here it is modern Israel, rife with moral contradictions. Australian screenwriter Danielle Green returns to her native Israel, 34 years after leaving it as a young child, to visit her father and to research a potential blockbuster movie about Masada. She finds a country on edge, in which her anti-Arab zealot father denies her existence and refuses her presence and a terrorist bombing brushes her with death. Still, she is moved by the land, warmed by an old friendship, and joyful during a brief affair with her slippery producer-director. This exceptional novel bursts with the energy and turmoil of Israel, as seen through the eyes of a character so well-defined she seems like an old friend. Michele Leber, Fairfax Cty. P.L., Va. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

By a new and major Australian talent, which--like the author's Turtle Beach (1983), set in Malaysia--plumbs the hectic evasions and edgy stances of individuals surviving within, or entering upon, a culture at the boiling point. Here d'Alpuget views modern Israel through the guilts, affections, fears and commitments of both engaged outsiders and citizens teetering in a ""fine hell-like balance."" Again, her landscapes are electric with incident and insight, breathtakingly pictorial. A debt-ridden Australian scriptwriter, 38-year-old Danielle, returns to the land she had left 30 years before, leaving behind her Jewish father, maddened and frightened after the sniper death of his son. Danielle is about to earn a bundle as scriptwriter for a film based on the first-century Zealot revolt and the mass suicide at Masada. The film will be produced and directed by 30-ish Bennie Kidron (Danielle is sure he couldn't direct traffic). Bennie is greedy, ruthless, with a Hollywood brass, but ""his vices had a high polish."" Danielle, rejected once more by her mission-drunk father, falls in love with Bennie, who'd left Israel 15 years before and is doggedly deaf to any summons from the past. Both ""orphans"" play upon one another's guilts and vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, amid the cacophony of political turmoil and consequences not dreamed of by pioneers of Israel's ""rebirth,"" acquaintances exist on a volcano's rim: a young man faces a court-martial for refusing to serve in Lebanon; his father, an old warrior, disdaining government policy, still feels the gut imperative of Jewish survival; and Danielle's old teacher, a lifelong social activist who translates Virgil, learns wisdom in detachment. PLO terrorists, aided by a former London society photographer of fallen fortunes, and unwittingly helped by Danielle, plant a bomb; Bennie smokes a joint at Masada and cavorts on a handrail, but recites a psalm, offers Danielle an invisible dove, and saves a life; Danielle returns to Sydney, tries out a love affair that turns to ashes like the security of home, and in L.A. makes a ""droll"" comedy about Israel and terrorism. Near the close, briefly back in Israel, she'll ""see"" a dinosaur on the road ahead--a sure signal that Israel is an impossibility. Better to blink it away and make funny films. In sum: a startling, searching and sinewy novel, alive with a tortuous-to-fantastic ""laminate of clans,"" old stones resting on the past's ""lake of human blood,"" all under the miraculous skies of Jerusalem. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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