The Parting Gift
A Novel
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
August 1, 2018
A novel about sexuality, acceptance, and Middle Eastern culture.National Jewish Book Award winner Fallenberg's (When We Dance on Water, 2011, etc.) most recent novel starts when an unnamed narrator decides to write a letter to Adam, his old college friend, who's sitting across the room from him. Months before, the narrator arrived at Adam's doorstep in a "middling city of America," providing no explanation as to why, how, or for how long. Launching into a 100-plus-page letter, the narrator explains the events that led up to his arrival. The narrator was visiting Tel Aviv with his friends when he met Uzi, a spice merchant whose smell was "meaty, truly pungent and ripe." Compelled by the pheromones Uzi was releasing, the narrator decides to leave his friends and stay with Uzi. Immediately, the two engage in an animalistic, uncontrollably sexual relationship: "We were a mess, a heaving, sweating, panting, quivering mess." Uzi, the typically macho laborer, welcomes the narrator into his home, to the surprise of his family, namely his ex-wife, who lives across the property. But homosexuality, however stigmatized it may be in Israel, doesn't seem to be that important to Uzi's family--their main concern is why now. Uzi and the narrator lead a typical life from then on, with the narrator spearheading the expansion of Uzi's spice business. Everything is going well until Ibrahim, the son of Uzi's friend, arrives for an apprenticeship. Filled with jealousy and resentment, the narrator progressively loses his mind. Fallenberg's story is one of heartbreak in which guilt and feelings of inadequacy ultimately cause his characters' downfalls. Written entirely in the form of a letter to Adam, the story is magnetic, drawing readers in from the first crotch-grab to the last goodbye. But more important, this is a complicated study of the ways in which religious heritage--from codes of honor to familial expectations--interacts with business and acceptance, family and lovers, and self-realization.A beautiful novel whose only fault is ending too soon.
COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
September 1, 2018
This latest novel by Fallenberg (When We Danced On Water, 2011) opens with an unnamed narrator's abrupt departure from graduate school under "highly unpleasant circumstances"; his quick decision to fly halfway around the world to Tel Aviv ("You know that my mother's Israeli, right?"); and his even hastier decision to abandon his travel companions at a roadside spice market, where he meets and soon falls for the market's proprietor: the incomparable Uzi. Uzi exudes the animal magnetism of someone who works with his hands and doesn't care what anyone thinks. Uzi is ostensibly straight, divorced twice with five kids, until he and the narrator engage in intense and frequent lovemaking. Complications arise when the narrator meets Uzi's ex-wife and children, who still live next door, and finds himself more deeply entangled in this strange family arrangement. From the beginning, the narrator includes commentary on his escapade, and Fallenberg navigates this back-and-forth in breezy prose that will captivate readers, who will certainly want to see this frenzied tryst through to its conclusion.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران