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Emma McEvoy

Auteur de The Inbetween People

3+ oeuvres 47 utilisateurs 19 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Emma McEvoy teaches at the University of Westminster, UK, in the department of English, Linguistics and Cultural Studies. She is the co-editor, with Catherine Spooner, of The Routledge Companion to Gothic (2007).

Œuvres de Emma McEvoy

The Inbetween People (2012) 43 exemplaires
Gothic Tourism (Palgrave Gothic) (2016) 3 exemplaires
The Monk 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Le Moine (1796) — Introduction, quelques éditions4,412 exemplaires

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Critiques

Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
This is a review of the advanced copy “The Inbetween People” by Emma McEvoy for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

The book is a first novel that examines personal grief and political grievances in contemporary Israel. Avi Goldberg is in prison, refusing to do his tour in the Israeli Defense Force reserves (he has already completed his active duty).

Avi’s father, Daniel, is a kibbutznik, a believer in the communitarian ideals associated with the founding of the Israeli state. While Avi is the protagonist, writing all night in his cell about his dead Israeli-Arab friend Saleem and his family, Daniel’s articulate, dry voice is heard in letters to Avi’s mother, Sareet. Sareet left the family when Avi was a child and moved to the Netherlands.

The perspective shifts, recording the loss of Saleem’s ancestral home and the curious position Saleem found himself occupying when he opted to serve in the IDF. To his family, this decision is at best an abdication and at worst a betrayal.

Along with multiple voices and perspectives, there are numerous flashbacks. The overall effect is of fragmentation—of lives, of the past. Even the future appears to be in tatters, the characters alternately desperate and fatalistic.

When Avi is victimized, he appears unwilling to exact vengeance. While Daniel records Avi’s injuries in almost clinical detail, he has nothing to say about the environment that made such injuries routine.

Deeply attuned to personal feelings, he is insulated from the climate of grief and resentment. In prison, Avi receives regular visits from Saleem’s widow.

The grasping form of Sahar, Saleem’s widow, and the tragic David, another prisoner, and a conscientious objector, are haunting figures. David is as lost as everyone else, but he is lost to his convictions, and this seems almost heroic in this arid miasma.

This reviewer is recommending this book and rates the book with 4 out of 5 stars.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
memasmb | 18 autres critiques | May 22, 2023 |
I loved this book, reading it was a breath of fresh air.

This is a tale that the character Jewish Avi Goldberg appears to need to tell to make sense of his own life. Avi is in prison writing about his friend Saleem an Israeli Arab. He writes about, both his and Saleem's family history and is a jigsaw of a tale, one which you cannot let go until the whole story has been read.

I loved the way the intricacies of their lives unravels slowly, how there is a sense of injustice and justice in war.


I was expecting a standard story, but enjoyably Emma McEvoy drew me into the lives of the characters.

There is a sense of peace and calm in the words, so that you can imagine sitting in the heat of the sun as you listen to story being told to you.

This book has sensitivity, love, sadness, and keeps the story being unravelled in your head when you put the book down.

… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
greatbookescapes | 18 autres critiques | Nov 20, 2014 |
I loved this book, reading it was a breath of fresh air.

This is a tale that the character Jewish Avi Goldberg appears to need to tell to make sense of his own life. Avi is in prison writing about his friend Saleem an Israeli Arab. He writes about, both his and Saleem's family history and is a jigsaw of a tale, one which you cannot let go until the whole story has been read.

I loved the way the intricacies of their lives unravels slowly, how there is a sense of injustice and justice in war.


I was expecting a standard story, but enjoyably Emma McEvoy drew me into the lives of the characters.

There is a sense of peace and calm in the words, so that you can imagine sitting in the heat of the sun as you listen to story being told to you.

This book has sensitivity, love, sadness, and keeps the story being unravelled in your head when you put the book down.

… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
greatbookescapes | 18 autres critiques | Nov 20, 2014 |
I loved this book, reading it was a breath of fresh air.

This is a tale that the character Jewish Avi Goldberg appears to need to tell to make sense of his own life. Avi is in prison writing about his friend Saleem an Israeli Arab. He writes about, both his and Saleem's family history and is a jigsaw of a tale, one which you cannot let go until the whole story has been read.

I loved the way the intricacies of their lives unravels slowly, how there is a sense of injustice and justice in war.


I was expecting a standard story, but enjoyably Emma McEvoy drew me into the lives of the characters.

There is a sense of peace and calm in the words, so that you can imagine sitting in the heat of the sun as you listen to story being told to you.

This book has sensitivity, love, sadness, and keeps the story being unravelled in your head when you put the book down.

… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
greatbookescapes | 18 autres critiques | Nov 20, 2014 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Aussi par
1
Membres
47
Popularité
#330,643
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
19
ISBN
11