Strand of a Thousand
Pearls
Author: Dorit Rabinyan
Random House Trade Paperbacks
ISBN-10: 0375760032
ISBN-13: 978-0375760037

Rabinyan's second novel
(after the international bestseller Persian
Brides) maintains an expert balance between
lyricism and tough-mindedness. Like Isaac Babel
in his Odessa short stories, she knows that a
metaphor is not an ornament, but rather a probe
(or even a bullet) into the heart. For instance,
here is how we are introduced to a rich
businessman: "in those days he was squeezing
money and tears out of almost every nation in
Africa. He began his business career by
importing hollow gold jewelry, but by the time
he met Sofia he had already become a major
purveyor of tear-gas." The Sofia in question is
one of the four Azizyan daughters, the beauty of
the family. Iran, the mother of this brood, and
Solly, their fisherman father, are both
Persian-speaking emigrants to Israel. The story
is given to us as a sort of allegorical fresco
it begins on the morning of Sofia's sister
Matti's 11th birthday and examines, in separate
insets, the weddings of the girls and their
parents' pasts, returning periodically to
Matti's birthday. Matti, poor girl, is half-mad,
imbued with the energy and craziness of her
stillborn twin brother, Moni. The other
daughters Lizzie and Marcelle aren't doing so
well either. Lizzie used to embarrass her mother
by masturbating in public. Marcelle falls
hopelessly in love at 13 with Yoel Hajjabi,
finally marries him and then falls out of love
with him on the day after her wedding. Matti,
meanwhile, spends her birthday cutting up the
family album and hiding in the backyard with the
specter of her demon-lover twin. Rabinyan is a
surprising writer the reader's casual
expectation that her lyricism will become
vapidly sentimental is agreeably disappointed by
frequent instances of the coldest realism.
(Publishers Weekly)
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