The Road to Ein Harod
In the dreamlike reality of The Road to Ein Harod, Israel is in the grip of a civil war following a military coup. Having killed an intruder, the narrator Rafi flees for his life towards Kibbutz Ein Harod in the Jezreel Valley. On the way he meets the Arab Mahmoud, who becomes the only person he can trust. The flight to Ein Harod becomes the road of ultimate understanding. But all the roads are blocked and the two are caught. In desperation they take two soldiers as hostages, but are unable to proceed and Mahmoud is shot. Reflecting on the past, Rafi realizes that he has fought for misguided ideals. When he finally reaches Ein Harod, he discovers that the preservation of freedom and decency which he dreamed of does not exist.
- Languages
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Arabic, Czech, Danish, English, French, German, Hungarian, Spanish
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French
Paris, Albin Michel, 1984 -
Arabic
Beirut, Al-Kalemah, 1987 -
English
London, Al Saqi, 1986;
New York, Grove, 1988 -
German
Augsburg, Oelbaum, 1987 -
Spanish
Jerusalem, La Semana, 1987 -
Danish
Copenhagen, Tiden, 1990 -
Czech
Prague, Ivo Zelezny, 1993 -
Hungarian
Budapest, Babel, 1997
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Title | The Road to Ein Harod |
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Writer's Last Name | Kenan |
Writer's First Name | Amos |
Genre | Fiction |
Publisher (Hebrew) | Am Oved |
No. Pages | 120pp. |
Book title - Hebrew (phonetic) | Ha-Derech Le-Ein Harod |
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“ The novel's historiosophical conclusions are fairly simple but highly concentrated....In the course of the apocalypse the utopian Ein Harod is transmuted into Ein Jalud and the Crusaders' Ein Harod.”
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“ I read The Road to Ein Harod at full speed, in one sitting, as though I were travelling in its pages from Tel Aviv to Ein Harod at 150 km an hour.”