All Backs Were Turned
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- £9.99
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- £9.99
Publisher Description
"An existential fable" from the uncompromising Polish author of Killing the Second Dog, known as the James Dean of Eastern Europe (The New York Times).
In this novel of breathtaking tension and sweltering love, two desperate friends on the edge of the law—one of them tough and gutsy, the other small and scared—travel to the southern Israeli city of Eilat to find work. There, Dov Ben Dov, the handsome native Israeli with a reputation for causing trouble, and Israel, his sidekick, stay with Ben Dov's recently married younger brother, Little Dov, who has enough trouble of his own. Local toughs are encroaching on Little Dov's business, and he enlists his older brother to drive them away. It doesn't help that a beautiful German widow named Ursula is rooming next door. What follows is a story of passion, deception, violence, and betrayal, all conveyed in hardboiled prose reminiscent of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, with a cinematic style that would make Humphrey Bogart and Marlon Brando green with envy.
"[A] blowtorch of a novel . . . Matchless and prescient." —Publishers Weekly
"A story as bleak and unrelenting as its setting, in which no one escapes the past or themselves. Nihilistic but compelling." —Kirkus Reviews
Praise for Marek Hlasko
"Hlasko was an original. His novels were fearless, his vision unsparing, and decades later, his darkly brilliant work has lost none of its power to unsettle. He achieved what few other writers ever have: he turned the literary landscape into a much more interesting place than it was when he found it." ––Emily St. John Mandel, author of National Book Award finalist Station Eleven
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Exposing human souls poisoned by self-hatred, this blowtorch of a novel gives us a trenchant appraisal of pre-1967 Israel, again demonstrating Hlasko's ( Killing the Second Dog ) empathy for society's desperate discards. The eminent Polish writer, who committed suicide at the age of 35 in 1969 during an 11-year self-exile, sets the book in the desert town of Elath, now a resort but in the early '60s a sweltering dumping ground for parolees and ne'er-do-wells. Here, ferrying a handful of hardy tourists around in a jeep, are Polish Holocaust survivor Israel Berg and native Israeli Dov Ben Dov. A disgraced officer who was a 1948 War hero, Dov mourns an estranged wife whose lover he murdered. Dov's younger brother, who bears the same name but is referred to as Little Dov, is a fisherman whose territory is being encroached upon by thugs spoiling for a fight; but parolee Dov resists Little Dov's entreaties for intervention. Israel is assailed by Holocaust survivors and native Israelis for his pacifism; Little Dov's wife lusts after Dov, and a visiting German woman tries to wrench Israel from Dov; Dov reviles his religious, quarrelsome father; and rich American Jewish tourists are resented and courted by their Israeli brethren. Although Hlasko bludgeons the reader with an ending that features castration and multiple murders, matchless and prescient is the author's vision of the tensions erupting in the Promised Land.