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The Man Who Fell Into a Puddle: Israeli Lives

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"Throughout my life as a journalist," writes Igal Sarna in his preface, "I have written about Israeli traumas and have seen how new lives are built on the ruins. How a new land sprouts out from a charred ground zero." In this striking collection of essays, Sarna taps his powers as an acclaimed investigative journalist to uncover the fascinating, wrenching experiences of Israeli men and women clinging to their stories, their history, their hope.

Meditations on memory and personal mythology, these superb essays startle as they move, all the while offering a unique perspective on contemporary Israel.

228 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1997

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Igal Sarna

17 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
12 reviews
September 1, 2022
Israeli journalist, Igal Sarna, offers a series of sketches about Israelis of various ages and backgrounds. In addition, one chapter describes the experiences of Armored Battalion 46 during the Yom Kippur War. (Sarna had completed his service in the battalion the previous August.) That chapter is harrowing and heartbreaking in a particular way because it is so personal, but most of the other stories contain different sorts of tragedies. "The Kurd's Seven Beds," fortunately, lightens the mood for a moment!
Sarna is an excellent writer; his tenderness and sympathy for his subjects is appreciably evident. However, nothing is sugar-coated. Translator Haim Watzman did a splendid job. Readers will feel they are given an insider's perspective on Israeli society.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
83 reviews
January 18, 2010
A series of stories about real people, damaged by or otherwise living in conflict with their pasts, whether marked by battle, holocaust, abandonment, or other forms of trauma and loss. It is written by a journalist, and this, I think, is the book's greatest weakness: its essays are written less as stories than as carefully recorded descriptions of chronological events in an individual life. And yet, as the stories unfold, there is passion, poetry and poignancy that sometimes surfaces above the journalist's formula. "Two Heroes" was the turning point for me, that stage in the reading when I thought "yes! I'll keep reading this... ." Another story "The Dead Company", written from a personal experience of a young soldier in training before and in the aftermath of the Yom Kippur War, was the most eloquent and moving piece in the book. The title story, "The Man Who Fell into a Puddle" gave an insightful look at the lifelong effect and ingrown sadness of an adult raised without love. Similar in tone and tragedy is the story of a lost baby, left behind during the flight from Poland in the Holocaust in the story titled "Whoever Knew Shut Up or Died". Having finished reading the last story, I feel the book deserves another, closer reading. I highly recommend.
Profile Image for Paul.
209 reviews11 followers
July 28, 2011
Excellent and varied collection of short essays. Sarna deftly examines the contemporary Israeli psyche through a variety of disparate and somewhat tragic characters and their vivid experiences.



[Also published under title: 'The Man Who Fell Into A Puddle: Israeli Lives'.]
Profile Image for Hal.
Author 6 books3 followers
August 7, 2012
This author is part of the long tradition of journalists who write bold nonfiction books, which read as wonderfully as novels. (Although, in this case, a short story collection might be a more valid comparison.) I have been enjoying the book's unique insights into Israeli culture ! !
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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