Become a Member
Books

Review: Between Life and Death

Hovering on Virgilian verge

October 21, 2016 12:39
Yoram Kaniuk: convalescent creativity

By

Clive Sinclair

2 min read

By Yoriam Kaniuk (Trans: Barbara Harshav)
Restless Books, £17.99

In book IV of the Aeneid, Virgil's hero journeys to Hades to seek guidance from his old dad. Entering the underworld via a cave, Aeneas comes upon the House of the Dead: "Between its dread jambs, is a courtyard where pain/ And self-wounding thoughts have ensconced themselves./ Here too are pallid diseases, the sorrows of age…agonies of the mind… all of these haunting nightmares/ Have their beds in the niches." (The quotation comes from Seamus Heaney's new translation).

This is precisely the territory that the late Yoram Kaniuk's final book inhabits. For Hades, read Ichilov, the vast medical complex in Tel Aviv, where the author spent four months hovering, as he puts it, "between life and death".

His publishers call it a novel, possibly because Kaniuk's disjointed thoughts are recollected in the relative tranquillity of convalescence. But in truth it is a memoir, the record of a journey that takes him to Sheol (which, being Jewish, Kaniuk prefers to Hades) and back. The narrative is a stream-of-unconsciousness, a mishmash of memories, which include: youth in Mandate Palestine; smuggling Holocaust survivors across the Mediterranean; narrow escapes from premature death during the War of Independence; and a bohemian sojourn in New York.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.