Taranaki Daily News

Book of the week

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Evacuation by Raphae¨ l Jerusalmy (Text, $24) Evacuation is a novel which was written by Raphae¨ l Jerusalmy, as he says, ‘‘in Tel Aviv, sitting outside the cafe´ A Consolatio­n and a Half, not far from the Rothschild Boulevard’’. It’s a book filled with wide cityscapes and the enigmatic incidents of missile warfare.

Jerusalmy is a French-educated writer who made his career in the Israeli military intelligen­ce services before becoming an antiquaria­n book-dealer and novelist in Tel Aviv. It’s a distinctiv­e resume´ which he puts to good use in his unsettling second book – although not in the way a reader might expect.

Evacuation is a bright, lightstruc­k novel, set in a near-deserted Tel Aviv, at some time slightly in the future.

The city has been largely evacuated in face of threats from rocket-bombardmen­t and the possibilit­y of germ warfare.

As any observer of Middle Eastern politics will observe, it is a scenario right out of present day headlines.

Naor is driving with his mother through Israel and recounting the

Despite its air of emergency, it is a languid novel. Danger comes lazily but when it does, the results are final.

events that happened during the ‘‘Emergency’’ when he was in Tel Aviv with his artist/painter girlfriend, Yae¨ l, and his grandfathe­r, Saba, who is a writer.

The book is punctuated by typographi­cal versions of highway signs along their route.

The trio had just boarded a bus amid the chaos of evacuation, when Saba, clutching a novel (Molloy by Samuel Beckett) gets off unexpected­ly. He refuses to return to his seat. The bus leaves without them.

They find themselves in a city largely emptied of people. Once the news crews have gone, then the intermitte­nt missiles start coming in – falling from the sky on shops and government offices. Despite this, they decide to remain.

It is a surreal experience. Lack of water for washing mean it is easier to raid shops for new clothing. Hyenas begin returning to the city from the countrysid­e. Yae¨ l begins painting. Naor plots a movie he shoots on his iPhone using the empty buildings and streets as a huge set.

Readers of the early fiction of James Ballard, the author of The Wind from Nowhere and The Burning World, will find themselves perfectly at home with the juxtaposit­ions of an abandoned metropolis and the forces of creation and destructio­n.

Evacuation is an apocalypti­c story told in a series of distanced intensely visual instants. Despite its air of emergency, it is a languid novel. Danger comes lazily but when it does, the results are final.

Ultimately, Jerusalmy reveals all the strangenes­s of an emblematic place torn by political, artistic, and religious currents. It is a crisp and oddly memorable book. – David Herkt

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