Forest Dark

Nicole Krauss

Forest Dark
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Country
United Kingdom
Published
1 September 2017
Pages
304
ISBN
9781408871799

Forest Dark

Nicole Krauss

Jules Epstein, a man whose drive, avidity, and personality have, for sixty-eight years, been a force to be reckoned with, is undergoing a metamorphosis. In the wake of his parents’ deaths, his divorce from a thirty-year marriage, and his retirement from the New York legal firm where he was a partner, he begins shedding the possessions he spent a lifetime accumulating - a watch here, an Old Master there - and becomes elusive, distant. Resolving to do something to commemorate his parents, he travels to Tel Aviv and checks into the Hilton.

Meanwhile, a novelist leaves her husband and children behind in Brooklyn and arrives at the same hotel, hoping that the view of the pool she used to dive into on childhood holidays will unlock her writer’s block. But when a retired professor of literature recruits her for a project involving Kafka, she is drawn into a mystery that will take her on a metaphysical journey and change her in ways she could never have imagined.

Review

Nicole Krauss’s new novel opens with the disappearance of Jules Epstein. A wealthy, retired New York lawyer, he has vanished in Tel Aviv. What’s more concerning is that he seems to have been vanishing for a while. His apartment in Tel Aviv is humble and crumbling; he has been gradually giving his accumulated wealth away. His children realise they have only been seeing him at the Tel Aviv Hilton. In a dual narrative, our second protagonist, a writer from Brooklyn, is experiencing an out-of-body episode. She starts to think that most of her life may have been an out-of-body episode. That instead of living her life, she has in fact been dreaming it: from the Tel Aviv Hilton.

This is a story of two disappearances, two lands (America and Israel), the competition of memory and history and two possible artistic works. In dreamlike, philosophical prose, Krauss pulls us along with her dual protagonists from New York to Israel; from the modern Tel Aviv to the ancient, storied landscape surrounding it. In a narrative that keeps trying to slip away, Krauss firmly tethers us to the transformation taking place in both protagonists. With inserted photographs of the Tel Aviv Hilton, Krauss pulls us back as the writer from Brooklyn becomes increasingly unfettered and dreamlike in her musings. As Kafka enters the story, we are given a photograph of the apartment that may hold all his unpublished work.

The questions Krauss asks are big. What is a life lived? What is the difference between history and memory? What is reality? Her prose is erudite and ephemeral, but she knows to give us something to hold onto, whether it is a photo of the Tel Aviv Hilton or the description of a possibly low-budget film of King David. Forest Dark is an unexpectedly funny book, grounded at every turn by moments of humour and small human interactions.


Marie Matteson is a book buyer at Readings Carlton.

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