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Review: No refuge from racism

This fictional thriller seems shockingly real

May 21, 2015 10:12

By

Alan Montague,

Alan Montague

1 min read

Liad Shoham's enjoyable, taut and pacy thriller Asylum City (Scribe, £8.99) is set around the African migrant community in Tel Aviv, and - after the recent riots in Israel involving Ethiopians demonstrating against mistreatment by the police - it seems shockingly real.

Michal Poleg is a young aid worker trying to help the Eritrean refugees who have settled alongside the old bus station in Tel Avi after surviving the perilous journey from Africa. She is a committed idealist who doesn't care whom she antagonises.

When she is brutally murdered, the suspects mount up. Was it the state attorney whom she accused of helping to deport her friend back to Ethiopia and certain death? Was it the Israeli gangsters she confronted, criminals who offer the Africans financial help only to steal away their meagre savings. Could it have even been her family, in a bitter row over a disputed will?

Spoilt for choice is investigating officer Anat Nachmias, who is on her first homicide. Like Michal, she is driven and committed. Unlike Michal, she is aware of the need not to alienate absolutely everyone around her, despite severe provocation from male colleagues.