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Minotaur (1989)

par Benjamin Tammuz

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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21111128,354 (3.77)30
"With echoes of Kafka and Conrad," the acclaimed Israeli author of Castle in Spain offers "a provocative, spare, slow-to-unfold mystery of character" (Kirkus Reviews). On the day of his forty-first birthday, Israeli secret agent Alexander Abramov encounters a beautiful young redhead on a city bus. He immediately recognizes her as the woman he has been searching for all his life, the one he has loved forever. Though they have never met, he is certain this young woman named Thea is an essential part of his life's destiny. Using all the tricks of his trade and communicating through anonymous letters, Abramov takes control of Thea's life without ever revealing his identity. Soon, Abramov's desperate, dangerous love for a woman half his age consumes everything in its path: time, distance, and rival suitors. And for Thea, keeping her lover safe from the amorous "Mr. Anonymous" becomes an obsession of her own. Only Abramov's own story, of a life conditioned by isolation, distrust, violence, and murder, can explain his devastating manipulation of the woman he professes to love. Hailed by Graham Greene as "the best novel of the year" upon its initial release in 1981,Minotaur is a highly inventive literary thriller.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 30 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 11 (suivant | tout afficher)
Il minotauro è un romanzo dello scrittore israeliano Benjamin Tammuz pubblicato in Italia dalla Edizioni e/o nel 1997. (fonte: Google Books)
  MemorialeSardoShoah | May 15, 2020 |
I first read this book some 30(!) years ago, and I remember picking up pieces of my mind off the wall afterwards... At the time I also read "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" and they resonated with each other. Spy books that have nothing to do with espionage.

I've been doing some re-reading lately...

So far (almost done...) the book is everything I remembered it to be. The translation (first read was in Hebrew) stumbles in the first few pages, but caused no long-lasting harm. It soon hits its groove, or you just get used to it and never notice it again.

The book is a story about the obsessive love of a middle-aged spy to a very young girl/woman.

The book is a commentary about how dysfunctional love can be, as all of the relationships described in it are deeply flawed. Notice that Tammuz, as the author, is the only one treating Thea as a whole person - he doesn't conform with his protagonists.

Slow moving, relatively little plot, deep characters, just fun to take in at its own pace. The book refers to the middle east conflict, but only as background, not as a central plot theme.

Le Carre's "The last illusion of an illusionless man" applies very well here. ( )
  meekGee | Jul 6, 2015 |
There's something to be said for not writing a review as soon as you finish a book. Let it settle, digest what's been taken in and reflect a little. When I closed Minotaur* my initial feeling was one of having been blown away by the taut and refined writing style, the way the plot unwinds gradually, revealing part of the truth, only then to be quickly snapped back like a spring to an earlier scene in the protagonists' stories - revealing more as it went. At least a week has passed and now I find on reflection a sense of depth to the plot that didn't immediately occur to me as I was reading. This is one that I think I'd like to one day return to afresh.

Tammuz' book chiefly involves four main characters - all brilliantly drawn - and the book is divided into four extended chapters covering each's story from their particular perspective. There is a lot of overlap, and more than a touch of mischief at play as the author teases the reader with subtle misdirections - almost as the characters in his story will at times play with each other's emotions.

Alexander Abramov is a mid-20th century Israeli secret agent, but he is not really the hero, or even anti-hero of the spy thriller that I was expecting to read. It is his 41st birthday, and he is alone in rain-soaked London, finding himself living in isolation and distanced both physically and metaphorically from his wife and children, his home and his origins. Into his life appears Thea, an unnervingly young beauty with dark copper coloured hair, who he instantly infatuates himself with. At a distance, Abramov observes her going about her life as his obsession grows. The manipulative techniques of his profession allow him to make her existence an inseparable part of his own; an increasingly despairing one that depends on a perpetually out-of-reach and exponentially damaging and unbalanced love affair. But it would be wrong to dismiss Abramov as a creepy stalker. Yes, he can certainly creep with the best of them, but his irregularly frequent letters to Thea - the pair have never met face to face, necessitating an elaborate Le Carresque arrangement via post restante collections - are anticipated by her with a flattered and romantic sensibility that is somewhere between bemused fascination and distracted fantasy.

The years, and letters, pass and we learn of Thea's other suitors, thankfully more conventional than the strange and melancholic Abramov. There is GR - a somewhat preppy and straight contemporary, who is supposedly more suitable, as well as the enigmatic Greek intellectual and academic Nikos Trianda, who also, like his fellow Mediterranean Alexander, falls in love with Thea at first sight. She is entirely convinced that he is in fact her mysterious and "anonymous friend" himself.

The author's spare style, and poetic prose, successfully moves the story along at a fair old pace - it is very well written. By the halfway mark of this slim novel, I was amazed at quite how much ground had been covered by the writing, and the years that had passed in its story.

The final and longest chapter (almost half the book) takes the reader back initially to Alexander's childhood, and his parents' stories of Europe and their self-imposed exiles of sorts in Ottoman/Mandate-era Palestine. The elements of his earlier life that formed his character become ever clearer against a background of isolated privilege, distant parents, nascent Israel, first loves, and existential wars.

Ostensibly a beautifully penned book about obsession and where it might stem from, as well as unfulfilled love, there are many passages that subtly suggest there could be more on Tammuz' mind. I'm not sure, but think that (writing in 1979) he is also saying something about Israel's place in the Levant, and in turn perhaps raises questions of isolation, belonging, and acceptance. I don't know if the last sentence will mean anything to anyone but myself, but Minotaur certainly made me ponder far more than I bargained for when Graham Greene's "The best novel of the year" blurb caught my eye. Have to say also that I kept on thinking what a terrific film this would make in the hands of the right director. Well worth the diversion, and I'll gladly read anything else by Benjamin Tammuz.

*A post script of praise for the [Europa Editions - World Noir] jacket design with this one - by Emanuele Ragnisco. It is after all both eye-catching and stylish - and deftly drops the very merest hint of the story within: a man sitting alone, in an apparently enticing location, face hidden, somehow lost in thought, possibly unhappy, or both? ( )
6 voter Polaris- | Apr 3, 2015 |
This is an odd but interesting and fast-paced book. In the first section, the whole story is given – it describes the relationship between a 41-year old Israeli secret agent and a 17-year old girl he sees on a bus. He’s easily able to find out her information and starts sending her anonymous letters telling her he loves her. Being a 17-year old, the girl, Thea, isn’t creeped out and her interest eventually turns into an idealized love. She’s able to write back to him a few times but never sees him. As the years pass, she becomes engaged to a neighbor who dies in a car accident and several years later falls in love with another man, who she at first takes for her pen pal.

The other sections describe the lives of the men who love her. All of them share some characteristics – wealthy, at ease all over the world, have difficult relationships with their parents. All three also have particular fixations that come to focus on Thea. Her fiancée develops Oedipal feelings after his father abandons the family and eventually these desires are transferred to the girl across the way. The Spanish lecturer, a Greek who grows up in Egypt and later moves to Europe, has a theory about the rise of the Mediterranean people and he sees Thea as a Mediterranean sort, though she is a British woman. The secret agent’s essential rootlessness and loveless marriage are counterbalanced by his dreams of a perfect woman and he decides that Thea is his dream girl.

The book is a fast read – even though you know the basic outlines of the plot, in every section, key twists or reinterpretations are given. The prose is rather distancing, except for the letters written in the initial section. This certainly moves the plot along and fits with the male characters’ isolation issues. In addition, because everyone is described in a clipped and factual way, Thea – whose life is also given a summary in the same manner – never seems particularly underdeveloped compared with the others, a real possibility given the story. An entertaining but not light read – recommended. ( )
2 voter DieFledermaus | Jan 16, 2012 |
bello veramente...,. avvolge nella sua storia ..... si avvinta su se stesso e storie all'apparenza staccate si ricompongono e si riuniscono in una bellezza letteraria.... non esagero se dico che è veramente bello..... ( )
  raix | Oct 7, 2011 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 11 (suivant | tout afficher)
With echoes of Kafka and Conrad, Israeli novelist Tammuz (Castle in Spain) has fashioned a provocative, spare, slow-to-unfold mystery of character.
ajouté par Polaris- | modifierKirkus Reviews
 
If the doomed atmosphere that hovers over the romances in Greene and Le Carré is present in Minotaur, so is a flavor that can only be described as more continental, and prose more sensuous than fits into the schemes of those two writers.
ajouté par Polaris- | modifierBoston Phoenix
 
A novel about the expectations and compromises that humans create for themselves... Very much in the manner of William Faulkner and Lawrence Durrell.
ajouté par Polaris- | modifierNew York Times
 

» Ajouter d'autres auteur(e)s (7 possibles)

Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Benjamin Tammuzauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Budhy, MildredTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Parfitt, KimTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Ragnisco, EmanueleConcepteur de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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"With echoes of Kafka and Conrad," the acclaimed Israeli author of Castle in Spain offers "a provocative, spare, slow-to-unfold mystery of character" (Kirkus Reviews). On the day of his forty-first birthday, Israeli secret agent Alexander Abramov encounters a beautiful young redhead on a city bus. He immediately recognizes her as the woman he has been searching for all his life, the one he has loved forever. Though they have never met, he is certain this young woman named Thea is an essential part of his life's destiny. Using all the tricks of his trade and communicating through anonymous letters, Abramov takes control of Thea's life without ever revealing his identity. Soon, Abramov's desperate, dangerous love for a woman half his age consumes everything in its path: time, distance, and rival suitors. And for Thea, keeping her lover safe from the amorous "Mr. Anonymous" becomes an obsession of her own. Only Abramov's own story, of a life conditioned by isolation, distrust, violence, and murder, can explain his devastating manipulation of the woman he professes to love. Hailed by Graham Greene as "the best novel of the year" upon its initial release in 1981,Minotaur is a highly inventive literary thriller.

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