A Horse Walks into a Bar
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- 8,99 €
Publisher Description
WINNER OF THE INTERNATIONAL MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2017
The setting is a comedy club in a small Israeli town. An audience that has come expecting an evening of amusement instead sees a comedian falling apart on stage; an act of disintegration, a man crumbling, as a matter of choice, before their eyes. They could get up and leave, or boo and whistle and drive him from the stage, if they were not so drawn to glimpse his personal hell. Dovaleh G, a veteran stand-up comic – charming, erratic, repellent – exposes a wound he has been living with for years: a fateful and gruesome choice he had to make between the two people who were dearest to him.
A Horse Walks into a Bar is a shocking and breathtaking read. Betrayals between lovers, the treachery of friends, guilt demanding redress. Flaying alive both himself and the people watching him, Dovaleh G provokes both revulsion and empathy from an audience that doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry – and all this in the presence of a former childhood friend who is trying to understand why he’s been summoned to this performance.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Grossman (To the End of the Land) masterfully balances the neuroses and hard-earned insight of veteran stand-up comedian Dov Greenstein with a defining memory that's 40 years in the shaping. The story of Dov's life his worship of a mentally ill mother who survived the Holocaust, his contentious relationship with his father, his awkward adolescence, and a brief stay at a military camp in Gadna unspools over one evening in a basement club in the small city of Netanya, Israel, related through the observations of Avishai Lazar, a boyhood friend of Dov's and, later, a respected judge. As Dov immerses himself in his act, the audience many of whom eventually walk out in bewilderment or anger at Dov's deeply personal (and often decidedly grim) revelations come to understand that, amid the self-deprecating humor and good-natured banter, the comedian is, for the first time, recounting the formative event of his life. "For an instant, when he looks up, the spotlight creates an optical illusion," Avishai muses as he watches Dov discover what has lain hidden for decades, "and a fifty-seven-year-old boy is reflected out of a fourteen-year-old man." Grossman wrestles with questions of faith and friendship, fate and family, with empathy, wisdom, and acerbic wit.