Bliss
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Set in Tel Aviv and Paris, a powerful story of love, friendship, regret, and war, as current as today's headlines
Ronit Matalon's fiction has been praised as "haunting," "inventive," "refreshingly daring." Now in a graceful, illuminating second novel, she tells a provocative story of two loves, two partings, two worlds, two women: Ofra and Sarah.
When Ofra is called from Tel Aviv to France to attend the funeral of her beloved cousin Michel, she escapes a life lived vicariously through Sarah, her oldest friend, a photographer and political activist. In Paris, Ofra enters the embrace of her French family and the intimate world of domestic life, while Sarah, in Tel Aviv, drifts even farther from her husband, Udi. Drawn to a Palestinian nationalist, she takes on the fight for a girl from Gaza who has been injured by an Israeli bullet and needs medical treatment that can only be had inside Israel. As Sarah adopts the cause with near- destructive zeal and pledges herself to the suffering of others, her own child goes untended, with dreadful consequences for all.
Against a backdrop of national conflict, Bliss confronts the terrible dilemma of choosing between one's desires and one's beliefs, between grand ideological commitment and the more mundane claims of family. With vivid, penetrating prose, Matalon has delivered a large and resonant work that is as artful as it is affecting.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An Israeli photographer who champions Palestinian rights pursues a dangerous affair that proves disastrous for her and her son in Matalon's latest (after The One Facing Us), an edgy, elliptical novel set in France and Tel Aviv and steeped in Mideastern politics. Sarah, 35, is the photographer protagonist; her story is told from the perspective of her best friend, Ofra, who is summoned from Tel Aviv to a provincial township near Paris for the funeral of her cousin Michel after he dies of AIDS. As Ofra settles into her extended family's domestic rituals in France, she learns about the disintegration of Sarah's marriage to her passive husband, Udi, an army medic, after Sarah becomes involved with a Palestinian named Marwan. With Ofra as narrator, Matalon achieves a measured, objective tone, but she is unable to fully account for Sarah's passion for Marwan, which seems especially puzzling as Sarah is embroiled in an incident in the Gaza strip and Marwan becomes violent and erratic. Matalon's finely calibrated prose, cosmopolitan outlook and nuanced perspective on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict give the novel a sophisticated grace, but Ofra never takes on sufficient depth and authority as narrator, while Sarah's passion seems more like an act of wild irresponsibility rather than the erotic obsession Matalon hints at throughout the narrative. Matalon's keen sense of place and awareness of the emotional undercurrents of political activism give this novel a heady appeal, but the diffuseness of focus prevents it from entirely cohering.