Suddenly, a knock on the door

Etgar Keret, 1967-

Book - 2012

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2012.
Language
English
Hebrew
Main Author
Etgar Keret, 1967- (-)
Other Authors
Miriam Shlesinger, 1947- (-), Sondra Silverston, Nathan Englander
Edition
1st American ed
Physical Description
viii, 189 p. ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780374533335
  • Suddenly, a knock on the door
  • Lieland
  • Cheesus Christ
  • Simyon
  • Shut
  • Healthy start
  • Teamwork
  • Pudding
  • Unzipping
  • The polite little boy
  • Mystique
  • Creative writing
  • Snot
  • Grab the cuckoo by the tail
  • Pick a color
  • Black and blue
  • What do we have in our pockets?
  • Bad karma
  • Ari
  • Bitch
  • The story, victorious
  • A good one
  • What, of this goldfish, would you wish?
  • Not completely alone
  • One step beyond
  • Big blue bus
  • Hemorrhoid
  • September all year long
  • Joseph
  • Mourners' meal
  • Parallel universes
  • Upgrade
  • Guava
  • Surprise party
  • What animal are you?.
Review by New York Times Review

AMERICANS have developed a peculiar reverence for the concept of "reality." We use the term to legitimize all manner of sleazy entertainment, and to judge our political leaders, whose capacity for being "real" is apparently measured by their willingness to drink beer with us. Of course, this bias has long informed our literary tradition, in which realism signifies authenticity and adulthood, the normative and hallowed province of James, Hemingway and Carver. Depart from it at your peril, ink-stained wretches, for a conveniently labeled ghetto awaits you - experimental, fabulist, surreal - all terms that signify, in the popular imagination anyway, artifice, obscurity and a kind of childish indulgence. How exhilarating then to encounter "Suddenly, a Knock on the Door," the new collection from Etgar Keret. An award-winning filmmaker, Keret is also one of Israel's best-selling authors, a status he earned in a manner that would be downright heretical here: by writing extremely short, fantastical stories. Worse yet, they are frequently funny. Were he living in Brooklyn, Keret would have been hogtied by a pack of rabid agents and ordered to drop the shtick and write a novel already. Which is not to say that he has escaped the burdens of celebrity. Consider the ingenious title story, in which three armed men hold a writer named Keret hostage and demand he tell them a story. Keret (the character) offers up a nervous description of his plight. "That's not a story," one of his assailants protests. "That's an eyewitness report. It's exactly what's happening here right now. Exactly what we're trying to run away from. Don't you go and dump reality on us like a garbage truck. Use your imagination, man, create, invent, take it all the way." It's a pep talk worthy of Beckett, and typical of Keret's narrative M.O.: a sly retreat from reality that in fact marks a determined advance on the private fears and wishes of his characters. What writer, after all, hasn't cowered before the glare of the empty page while also fantasizing, perversely, about a world in which his inventions are worth killing for? For Keret, the creative impulse resides not in a conscious devotion to the classic armature of fiction (character, plot, theme, etc.) but in an allegiance to the anarchic instigations of the subconscious. His best stories display a kind of irrepressible dream logic. A man left by his wife is continually mistaken for other people, and goes along with it, engaging in a series of urgent colloquies that jolt him from his depression. A stoic restaurateur who refuses to sit shiva for her late husband is descended upon by a mob of customers whose voracious appetites awaken her grief. A hit man facing execution brags of his sadistic excess only to be reincarnated as Winnie the Pooh. Reduced to their outlines, plots like these can sound gimmicky. But Keret alights upon protagonists in the midst of psychic upheaval, willing to embrace the bizarre twists that deliver them to their appointed grace or ruin. The humor in their travails arises not from an effort to charm the reader but to confront the darkness that shadows our human folly. So yes, we do meet a talking goldfish whose patter calls to mind Don Rickles, but the fish remains helpless to quell the crushing loneliness of its owner. Keret's previous collections have showcased a dazzling cross section of discombobulated heroes: miserable army conscripts, troubled magicians, vexed immigrants, libidinous monkeys. But there was sometimes a sense that he was using his imaginative gifts as a dodge, leapfrogging from one clever conceit to the next without much emotional investment in his people. These new stories feel more mature, especially when Keret is probing the tender intricacies of family life. He's long been expert at capturing the whims and anxieties of children. He does so here, though, in a stark literal style that represents the most radical departure from his earlier work. "The Polite Little Boy" offers an unflinching portrait of an imploding marriage from the perspective of a kid caught in the middle: "The mother got up and slapped the father as hard as she could. It was strange, because it looked as if this slap only made the father happy, and it was actually the mother who started crying." In "Teamwork," an aggrieved divorcé devises a brutal plan to punish his son's negligent baby sitter, who happens to be his ex-wife's mother. The cycle of paternal panic and capitulation presented in "Big Blue Bus" will haunt any father who has resorted to cartoons to pacify his child - which is to say all of us. As a stylist, Keret specializes in unadorned, mostly expository prose. He writes to ensure narrative momentum, not to distract the reader with figurative language. This has the fortunate effect of rendering his lyric flights that much more striking. "She gets swallowed up by these waves of convulsions, involuntary ones, from deep inside," one of his lovesick heroes reports. "They rumble their way into her neck and tickle the soles of her feet. It's like her whole anatomy is trying to say thanks without knowing how." (Worth mentioning is that Keret's regular translators, Miriam Shlesinger and Sondra Silverston, are joined this time around by the American story writer Nathan Englander, a longtime fan.) KERET, born in 1967, has often been distinguished from Israeli writers of the previous generation by virtue of his whimsy. But his concerns are different, as well. While Amos Oz and David Grossman wrestle with the moral quandaries of the emergent Jewish state, and Aharon Appelfeld plumbs the calamitous dislocations of Jewish history, Keret tracks the chaotic inner life of his countrymen. To him, the perils of modern Israel - the free-floating rage, the anguish of occupation, the sudden and senseless violence - are not national dramas so much as existential dilemmas. Of course, the occupational hazard of writing as Keret does is that several of the nearly three dozen stories here come off as half-finished thought experiments. Others lurch toward sentiment at the end. Keret has a tendency to meander when given too much room and not enough premise. He's most effective when he strips away the constraints of realism and gives rein to his subversive imagination. In "Unzipping," a woman named Ella finds a small zipper under her lover's tongue as he lies sleeping. When she pulls it, her lover opens up "like an oyster," revealing a second man. Ella soon realizes she has a zipper under her tongue as well, and the story ends with her fingering it uncertainly, trying "to imagine what she'd be like inside," It's an eerie meditation on the instability of identity, and spans all of five paragraphs. In gems like this, Keret evinces what the psychoanalyst Bruno Bettelheim called "the uses of enchantment," an ability to compel readers to experience their hidden terrors by means of symbolic narrative. Bettelheim used the term to describe fairy tales. It's a testament to Keret's unorthodox gifts that his dark evocations read with the same disarming allure. 'Use your imagination, man,' one of Keret's characters exhorts. 'Create, invent, take it all the way.'

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [April 15, 2012]
Review by Booklist Review

Best-selling Israeli short story writer Keret's latest collection of very short short stories begins and ends with tales about writers writing on demand, either at gunpoint or in front of a camera. In between, characters tells stories to get by and succumb to fantasies. A man returns to his childhood home and falls into an alternative realm, where he confronts embodiments of every lie he ever told. An uninsured insurance salesman racks up sales when he tells the tale of how he was struck by a falling man while keeping his blissful memories of being in a coma to himself. Keret riffs brilliantly on the fairy tale about the fish who grants three wishes. A woman discovers a tiny zipper on her boyfriend's tongue; lost luggage leads to a bloody altercation; a woman only takes lovers named Ari. Strangeness abounds. Keret fits so much psychological and social complexity and metaphysical mystery into these quick, wry, jolting, funny, off-handedly fabulist miniatures, they're like literary magic tricks: no matter how closely you read, you can't figure out how he does it.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

An all-star roster of narrators masterfully performs the audio edition of Keret's latest collection, which mixes humor, emotion, absurdity, morality, and humility. Each story in the collection brings a new narrator, including Robert Wisdom, Ira Glass, Miranda July, Ben Marcus, George Saunders, Michael Chabon, John Sayles, Stanley Tucci, and Willem Dafoe-just to name a select few. The varied stories offer skewed points of view on such everyday activities as ordering food, having coffee with a potential employer, and raising children. The result is a truly inspired series of performances and an utterly entertaining audiobook. Listening quickly becomes a compulsion. An FSG paperback. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

From Israeli author Keret (The Nimrod Flipout), these stories take the world by storm and by stealth, in equal parts and everything in between. The title piece is a Three Stooges-like approach to the absurdities of writing; belligerent strangers are continually knocking on the writer's door demanding stories. In "Lieland," the author sets up a moral conundrum of a universe where the lies we tell are made real, while "What of this Goldfish Would You Wish" examines life through the lens of a wish-granting goldfish. "Polite Little Boy" is achingly direct, while "The Story" and "Victorious parts I and II" sassily advocate for themselves with the reader. The stories range from comic to droll to a nether state of complex poignancy; Keret's irreverent, unfettered imagination is truly stunning as he gives voice with equal aplomb to hemorrhoids and guavas while maintaining a wicked edge by wavering to extremes. VERDICT Story meets aphorism meets Zen koan with a liberal dose of humor and a blindingly sharp grasp of the impossible possibilities of the human condition. Art truly fashioned from words; highly recommended. [See Prepub Alert, 9/23/11.]-Henry Bankhead, Los Gatos P.L., CA (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Stories about storytelling from a young Israeli author. With stories this short (many are a paragraph or two or a page or two, making the 22 pages of the penultimate "Surprise Party" feel like an epic), every word counts, so it's quite possible that something has been lost in the translation (with no slight intended to the three translators credited, including noted author Nathan Englander). However these stories might read differently in Hebrew, and signify something different within a different cultural context, they function like fables and parables, fairy tales and jokes, with goldfish that grant wishes, parallel universes, an insurance agent who suffers (and then prospers) from his own lack of insurance, a woman who mourns her miscarriage with a creative-writing course (with her husband becoming jealous of the instructor and responding by writing his own revelatory stories). Bookending the collection are two stories featuring a writer as protagonist, a first-person narrator that the reader is invited to identify as the author, who is being forced to perform the act of writing for the benefit of others. The first, the title story, finds him coerced to create at gunpoint, conjuring a plot that proceeds to transpire within the story as he takes some pleasure from "creating something out of something." The final story, "What Animal Are You?," shows the self-conscious writer being filmed for a TV feature as he's in the process of writing (or at least simulating it), wondering whether a hooker might seem more natural on camera as his wife than his wife does. His pieces elicit comparison to sources as diverse as Franz Kafka, Kurt Vonnegut and Woody Allen. He also recalls Lydia Davis in his compression and Donald Barthelme in his whimsy. Yet the stories are hit-and-miss, some of them slight or obvious, though the suggestion that "in the end, everyone gets the Hell or the Heaven he deserves" might be a fantasy that readers will wish were true. More like bits and sketches than stories, from a writer who is often very funny and inventive, and occasionally profound.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

WHAT, OF THIS GOLDFISH, WOULD YOU WISH? Yonatan had a brilliant idea for a documentary. He'd knock on doors. Just him. No camera crew, no nonsense. Just*Yonatan, on his own, a small camera in hand, asking, "If you found a talking goldfish that granted you three wishes, what would you wish for?" Folks would give their answers, and Yoni would edit them down and make clips of the more surprising responses. Before every set of answers, you'd see the person standing stock-still in the entrance to his house. Onto this shot he'd superimpose the subject's name, family situation, monthly income, and maybe even the party he'd voted for in the last election. All that, combined with the three wishes, and maybe he'd end up with a poignant piece of social commentary, a testament to the massive rift between our dreams and the often comprimised reality in which we live. It was genius, Yoni was sure. And, if not, at least it was cheap. All he needed was a door to knock on and a heart beating on the other side. With a little decent footage, he was sure he'd be able to sell it to Channel 8 or Discovery in a flash, either as a film or as a bunch of vignettes, little cinematic corners, each with that singular soul standing in a doorway, followed by three killer wishes, precious, every one. Even better, maybe he'd cash out, package it with a slogan and sell it to a bank or cellular phone company. Maybe tag it with something like "Different dreams, different wishes, one bank." Or "The bank that makes dreams come true." No prep, no plotting, natural as can be, Yoni grabbed his camera and went out knocking on doors. In the first neighborhood he went to, the kindly folk that took part generally requested the foreseeable things: health, money, bigger apartments, either to shave off a couple of years or a couple of pounds. But there were also powerful moments. One drawn, wizened old lady asked simply for a child. A Holocaust survivor with a number on his arm asked very slowly, in a quiet voice--as if he'd been waiting for Yoni to come, as if it wasn't an exercise at all--he'd been wondering (if this fish didn't mind), would it be possible for all the Nazis left living in the world to be held accountable for their crimes? A cocky, broad-shouldered lady-killer put out his cigarette and, as if the camera wasn't there, wished he were a girl. "Just for a night," he added, holding a single finger right up to the lens. And these were wishes from just one short block in one small, sleepy suburb of Tel Aviv. Yonatan could hardly imagine what people were dreaming of in the development towns and the collectives along the northern border, in the West Bank settlements and Arab villages, the immigrant absorption centers full of broken trailers and tired people left to broil out in the desert sun. Yonatan knew that if the project was going to have any weight, he'd have to get to everyone, to the unemployed, to the ultrareligious, to the Arabs and Ethiopians and American expats. He began to plan a shooting schedule for the coming days: Jaffa, Dimona, Ashdod, Sderot, Taibe, Talpiot. Maybe Hebron, even. If he could sneak past the wall, Hebron would be great. Maybe somewhere in that city some beleaguered Arab man would stand in his doorway and, looking through Yonatan and his camera, looking out into nothingness, just pause for a minute, nod his head, and wish for peace--that would be something to see. Sergei Goralick doesn't much like strangers banging on his door. Especially when those strangers are asking him questions. In Russia, when Sergei was young, it happened plenty. The KGB felt right at home knocking on his door. His father had been a Zionist, which was pretty much an invitation for them to drop by any old time. When Sergei got to Israel and then moved to Jaffa, his family couldn't wrap their heads around it. They'd ask him, What are you looking to find in a place like that? There's no one there but addicts and Arabs and pensioners. But what is most excellent about addicts and Arabs and pensioners is that they don't come around knocking on Sergei's door. That way Sergei can get his sleep, and get up when it's still dark. He can take his little boat out into the sea and fish until he's done fishing. By himself. In silence. The way it should be. The way it was. Until one day some kid with a ring in his ear, looking a little bit homosexual, comes knocking. Hard like that--rapping at his door. Just the way Sergei doesn't like. And he says, this kid, that he has some questions he wants to put on the TV. Sergei tells the boy, tells him in what he thinks is a straightforward manner, that he doesn't want it. Not interested. Sergei gives the camera a shove, to help make it clear. But the earring boy is stubborn. He says all kinds of things, fast things. And it's hard for Sergei to follow; his Hebrew isn't so good. The boy slows down, tells Sergei he has a strong face, a nice face, and that he simply has to have him for this movie picture. Sergei can also slow down, he can also make clear. He tells the kid to fuck off. But the kid is slippery, and somehow between saying no and pushing the door closed, Sergei finds that the kid is in his house. He's already making his movie, running his camera without any permission, and from behind the camera he's still telling Sergei about his face, that it's full of feeling, that it's tender. Suddenly the kid spots Sergei's goldfish flitting around in its big glass jar in his kitchen. The kid with the earring starts screaming, "Goldfish, goldfish," he's so excited. And this, this really pressures Sergei, who tells the kid, it's nothing, just a regular goldfish, stop filming it. Just a goldfish, Sergei tells him, just something he found flapping around in the net, a deep-sea goldfish. But the boy isn't listening. He's still filming and getting closer and saying something about talking and fish and a magic wish. Sergei doesn't like this, doesn't like that the boy is almost at it, already reaching for the jar. In this instant Sergei understands the boy didn't come for television, what he came for, specifically, is to snatch Sergei's fish, to steal it away. Before the mind of Sergei Goralick really understands what it is his body has done, he seems to have taken the burner off the stove and hit the boy in the head. The boy falls. The camera falls with him. The camera breaks open on the floor, along with the boy's skull. There's a lot of blood coming out of the head, and Sergei really doesn't know what to do. That is, he knows exactly what to do, but it really would complicate things. Because if he takes this kid to the hospital, people are going to ask what happened, and it would take things in a direction Sergei doesn't want to go. "No reason to take him to the hospital anyway," says the goldfish, in Russian. "That one's already dead." "He can't be dead," Sergei says, with a moan. "I barely touched him. It's only a burner. Only a little thing." Sergei holds it up to the fish, taps it against his own skull to prove it. "It's not even that hard." "Maybe not," says the fish. "But, apparently, it's harder than that kid's head." "He wanted to take you from me," Sergei says, almost crying. "Nonsense," the fish says. "He was only here to make a little something for TV." "But he said ..." "He said," says the fish, interrupting, "exactly what he was doing. But you didn't get it. Honestly, your Hebrew, it's terrible." "Yours is better?" Sergei says. "Yours is so great?" "Yes. Mine's supergreat," the goldfish says, sounding impatient. ''I'm a magic fish. I'm fluent in everything:" All the while the puddle of blood from the earring kid's head is getting bigger and bigger and Sergei is on his toes, up against the kitchen wall, desperate not to step in it, not to get blood on his feet. "You do have one wish left," the fish reminds Sergei. He says it easy like that, as if Sergei doesn't know--as if either of them ever loses count. "No," Sergei says. He's shaking his head from side to side. "I can't," he says. "I've been saving it. Saving it for something." "For what?" the fish says. But Sergei won't answer. That first wish, Sergei used up when they discovered a cancer in his sister. A lung cancer, the kind you don't get better from. The fish undid it in an instant--the words barely out of Sergei's mouth. The second wish Sergei used up five years ago, on Sveta's boy. The kid was still small then, barely three, but the doctors already knew something in her son's head wasn't right. He was going to grow big but not in the brain. Three was about as smart as he'd get. Sveta cried to Sergei in bed all night. Sergei walked home along the beach when the sun came up, and he called to the fish, asked the goldfish to fix it as soon as he'd crossed through the door. He never told Sveta. And a few months later she left him for some cop, a Moroccan with a shiny Honda. In his heart, Sergei kept telling himself it wasn't for Sveta that he'd done it, that he'd wished his wish purely for the boy. In his mind, he was less sure, and all kinds of thoughts about other things he could have done with that wish continued to gnaw at him, half driving him mad. The third wish, Sergei hadn't yet wished for. "I can restore him," says the goldfish. "I can bring him back to life." "No one's asking," Sergei says. "I can bring him back to the moment before," the goldfish says. "To before he knocks on your door. I can put him back to right there. I can do it. All you need to do is ask." "To wish my wish," Sergei says. "My last." The fish swishes his fish tail back and forth in the water, the way he does, Sergei knows, when he's truly excited. The goldfish can already taste freedom. Sergei can see it on him. After the last wish, Sergei won't have a choice. He'll have to let the goldfish go. His magic goldfish. His friend. "Fixable," Sergei says. "I'll just mop up the blood. A good sponge and it'll be like it never was." That tail just goes back and forth, the fish's head steady. Sergei takes a deep breath. He steps out into the middle of the kitchen, out into the puddle. "When I'm fishing, while it's dark and the world's asleep," he says, half to himself and half to the fish, "I'll tie the kid to a rock and dump him in the sea. Not a chance, not in a million years, will anyone ever find him." "You killed him, Sergei," the goldfish says. "You murdered someone--but you're not a murderer." The goldfish stops swishing his tail. "If, on this, you won't waste a wish, then tell me, Sergei, what is it good for?" It was in Bethlehem, actually, that Yonatan found his Arab, a handsome man who used his first wish for peace. His name was Munir; he was fat with a big white mustache. Superphotogenic. It was moving, the way he said it. Perfect, the way in which Munir wished his wish. Yoni knew even as he was filming that this guy would be his promo for sure. Either him or that Russian. The one with the faded tattoos that Yoni had met in Jaffa. The one that looked straight into the camera and said, if he ever found a talking goldfish he wouldn't ask of it a single thing. He'd just stick it on a shelf in a big glass jar and talk to him all day, it didn't matter about what. Maybe sports, maybe politics, whatever a goldfish was interested in chatting about. Anything, the Russian said, not to be alone. Excerpted from Suddenly, a Knock on the Door: Stories by Etgar Keret All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.