Price  £10.99
Format  Paperback
Published  November 2003
Length  576 pages
ISBN  9781870015868
ISBN  9781905559381 (ebook)

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The Liberated Bride
A.B. Yehoshua     

 

Yochanan Rivlin, a professor of Near Eastern Studies at Haifa University, is determined to understand two conflicts that have become central to his life: the Algerian civil war of the 1990s, which he feels will help him better understand the Arab mind and, more personally, his son’s divorce. His is a double search for truth, each involving a different bride—Samaher, his newly-wed Arab research assistant from a village in the Galilee, and Galya, who deserted his son in Jerusalem with no explanation. Against his wife’s better judgement, Rivlin tries obsessively to get to the core of both problems, crossing boundaries at once personal and political—man and wife, father and son, teacher and pupil, Jew and Arab.

With equal measures of energy, humour, anxiety, and poetry, Yehoshua portrays a life sometimes improbable, often dark, and infinitely rich. The Liberated Bride is a feat of masterly storytelling from one of the world’s great novelists.

 

'A splendidly realized search for the causes of ruptures that rend families and nations: both timely and timeless.'

     Kirkus Review

 


About A.B. Yehoshua

Born in Jerusalem in 1936, A.B. Yehoshua was the author of twelve novels, a collection of short stories, and several plays and volumes of essays. He has won prizes worldwide and his work has been translated into twenty-eight languages and adapted for film and opera. An outspoken critic of both Israeli and Palestinian policies, he continued to speak about and search for solutions to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Yehoshua died in June 2022, aged 85.


Latest News

Israeli Literature and the Second Intifada, Haaretz, 10 October 2020: David B. Green considers how A.B. Yehoshua’s ‘The Liberated Bride’ and ‘A Woman in Jerusalem,’ among works by other Israeli authors, represent the second intifada. See excerpt here.

 

'The Liberated Bride seethes with emotions, dreams, ideas, humor, pathos, all against a backdrop of violence, conflict, and terror.'

     The Sun (New York)

 

'Yehoshua seeks to present two worlds, those of Israel’s Jewish majority and its Arab minority. He has done it rather as Tolstoy wrote of war and peace: two novels, in a sense, yet intimately joined. Paradoxically – and paradox…is the book’s engendering force – the war is mainly reflected in the zestfully intricate quarrels in the Jewish part of the novel. The peace largely flowers when Rivlin finds himself breaking through the looking glass into the Arab story.'

Richard Eder,The New York Times

 

'The Liberated Bride is tinged with the kind of innate, unavoidable suspense that the threat of bus bombs brings.'

     Herald Tribune

 

'The boundaries that are broken down in The Liberated Bride include those within the self and others; mystical boundaries between self and God; political and cultural boundaries and finally, the stylistic boundaries of the novel itself, which Yehoshua is constantly stretching in different directions.'

     International Jerusalem Post