This bleak evocation of a colony that will one day become a thriving suburb of Tel Aviv takes a strong grip on readers, thrusting them into embattled households and secret lives. The Weiss family, newly arrived from eastern Europe, resides in a cluttered house where daughters Riva and Batsheva languish, reading novels and giggling when the occasional visitor arrives. Their father alternately harangues and soothes his discontented family while devoting most of his time to his orange groves. When his wife pulls the bedclothes over her head and diesas for a long time she has threatened to dohe turns for relief first to religion and then to an old woman, whom he marries. Soon their imposing new mansion begins to crumble; the daughters itch with repressed sexuality; WW I begins and there is no longer a market for Weiss's fruit. Though its atmosphere of despair is all but overwhelming, the novel is nonetheless oddly compelling.
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| Index | 2487 |
| Added Date | Jan 05, 2016 18:25:39 |
| Modified Date | Jul 18, 2022 19:25:34 |
| Library of Congress |