Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

The Israeli detective novel

The Israeli detective novel

FromIsrael in Translation


The Israeli detective novel

FromIsrael in Translation

ratings:
Length:
7 minutes
Released:
Oct 28, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Israelis have not been writing detective fiction for very long; Batya Gur’s 1992 The Saturday Morning Murder: a psychoanalytic case was the first Israeli crime novel to reach a wide American Audience. In her 2005 obituary, the New York Times said she was “almost single-handedly responsible for making the detective novel a flourishing genre in Israeli letters.”
Breaking with the conventions of detective fiction, Gur’s novels are always set in closed societies: A psychoanalytic institute, a kibbutz, a literature department, or a television station. The community’s tensions, factions, and prejudices mirror Israel's own. To crack each case, the Moroccan-born detective Michael Ohayon has to immerse himself in these tight-knit worlds.
Host Marcela Sulak reads from Murder in Jerusalem, translated by Evan Fallenberg. The action begins in the studios of the national Television station, Channel One. The set designer has been found beneath a fallen pillar on the set of a film adaptation of Shai Agnon's Iddo and Eynam, and the witness to the crime has also died...
Text:
Batya Gur, Murder in Jerusalem. Translated Evan Fallenberg. Harper Books.
Further texts by Batya Gur, all published by Harper:
The Saturday Morning Murder: a psychoanalytic case.Literary Murder: a Critical CaseMurder Duet: a Musical CaseMurder on a Kibbutz: A Communal CaseBethlehem Road Murder
Music:
Alex Cannon - The Revealing; Murder Mystery Background
Released:
Oct 28, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Exploring Israeli literature in English translation. Host Marcela Sulak takes you through Israel’s literary countryside, cityscapes, and psychological terrain, and the lives of the people who create it.