I can’t make up my mind here. Is In that Sleep of Death, the latest Adam Lapid story by Israeli author Jonathan Dunsky, a mystery or a literary novel? The obvious answer is that it’s some of both.
It’s 1952. Lapid is a private investigator based in Tel Aviv. He has a painful past – a police detective in Hungary who, with his wife mother, and two daughters, was sent to Auschwitz in 1944 for the crime of being Jewish. He is the family’s only survivor.
For a time after the war, he hunted former Nazis in Europe, quietly and effectively exacting justice. He emigrated to Israel in time for the 1948 War of Independence, in which he was seriously wounded after a heroic action to save his unit from Egyptian gunners. Now he’s a private detective; he bears no great regard for the police, as it was the Hungarian police who herded his family into a boxcar.
Sometimes, after nightmares leave him unable to sleep, Lapid wanders the streets of Tel Aviv. And so one night he sees a fellow night wanderer and feels a kinship, even though the two never speak. It’s Lapid who finds the man’s body and calls it in anonymously to the police, and it’s Lapid who takes on his own investigation after the police come up short. And his investigation takes him into the stories of pre-war Jewish Poland, the Holocaust, and contemporary frauds. And it make be taking him into unexpected romance.
Jonathan Dunsky |
Dunsky is best known for his Adam Lapid mystery stories, with eight published: Ten Years Gone, The Dead Sister, The Auschwitz Violinist, A Debt of Death, A Deadly Act, The Auschwitz Detective, A Death in Jerusalem, and now In That Sleep of Death. He’s also published The Favor: A Tale of Friendship and Murder; Family Ties; Tommy’s Touch: A Fantasy Love Story; the short story “The Unlucky Woman,” and other works. He was born in Israel, served four years in the Israeli Army, lived in Europe for several years, and currently lives in Israel with his family. He has worked in various high-tech firms and operated his own search optimization business.
In That Sleep of Death is a fine mystery, but it’s also something I hadn’t noticed before in Dunsky’s books – it’s something of a literary novel as well. It has a Kafkaesque beginning, the wandering of empty nighttime streets. It has the overall feel of a literary novel, and yet it’s clearly a detective mystery, not unlike the novels of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Dunsky has produced a good story, an intriguing mystery, and a solid literary effort.
Related:
My review of Ten Years Gone by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of The Unlucky Woman by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of The Dead Sister by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of The Auschwitz Violinist by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of A Debt of Death by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of A Deadly Act by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of Grandma Rachel’s Ghosts by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of The Auschwitz Detective by Jonathan Dunsky.
My review of A Death in Jerusalem by Jonathan Dunsky.
Some Monday Readings
The Rise of the Cyber City – Walter Russell Mead at Tablet Magazine.
Post Office Tower and Tower Tavern – A London Inheritance.
Charles Spurgeon’s Londoners – Spitalfields Life.
Things Worth Remembering: ‘We Will Fight with Stones in Our Hands’ – Douglas Murray at The Free Press on Golda Meir’s speech in 1948.
2 comments:
Well Glynn. You sold me. I have this book sitting in my Amazon cart waiting to be set free. :) I have his other Adam Lapid mysteries and I love his writing. I was about to "purge" by giving these to someone who loves historical mysteries. I'll get this one and then decide what to do. She may have lost out!! :)
Bill, I'm a fan of the Adam Lapid mysteries. The author, Jonathan Dunsky, lives in Tel Aviv, and he regularly posts pictures on Facebook of streets and buildings that Lapid would have known in the early 1950s.
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