海角大神

'The Seven Good Years' collects quirky, touching family stories by Israeli writer Etgar Keret

Etgar Keret presents his memoir: a series of raw and witty stories that document seven years of a father-son relationship.

July 13, 2015

Not long ago, the Israeli writer Etgar Keret was sitting in a restaurant with his son Lev when a waiter said something that made him angry. The child of two Holocaust survivors, raised in a house where the creative insult was an art form, Keret responded with a sharp word. And then each time a new server approached their table Keret complained to them, too. Keret moved slowly up the line, getting angrier each time, all the way through the entire restaurant staff.

鈥淚 insulted each and every one of them,鈥 Keret remembers dolefully on a recent morning in Manhattan, well into his third espresso with no apparent effect on his bearing. 鈥淚n the end the manager came and apologized and he brought Lev a cake. And Lev said to me, 鈥榊ou know, now I understand, this is how people should live. We should shout at people and humiliate them and then they bring you stuff.鈥

鈥淎nd this is when I realized that I should change.鈥

Gen Z women say 鈥榥o thanks鈥 to motherhood. Reasons range from practical to spiritual.

Keret does not appear to be an angry man, and in fact comes off as exactly the opposite. Small and warmly handsome, perpetually disheveled, he radiates kindness. Like a tiny Jewish, stonerish George Clooney. But there are equal parts steel and down inside him, and in the past decade 鈥 raising a child for the first time, watching his father鈥檚 health decline 鈥 he found his attempts to reconcile them coming to a reckoning point.

He tells the story of this balancing act in聽The Seven Good Years, his first memoir. Like his five collections of very short stories, the book is niftily, tidily made. No chapter is longer than a few pages, and yet each one delivers a well-aimed punch or a burst of hilarity. Often, it鈥檚 both.

The book begins with the birth of Keret鈥檚 son 鈥 the first personal essay Keret ever wrote 鈥 and ends with the account of a rocket assault on Tel Aviv, during which Keret and his wife, Shira, pull over on a highway and distract Lev from the danger by playing a game called pastrami, in which Keret lies beneath his son and his wife atop him, making a human deli sandwich.

In between the book builds a vivid and moving portrait of Keret鈥檚 parents, their fierce and generous nature. It was from them in equal measure that Keret learned the power of narrative. 鈥淢y mother was very, very good at kind of making up stories,鈥 Keret says. 鈥淢y father would only tell me stuff that had really happened.鈥

Both of their lives were the stuff of grim fairy tales. Keret鈥檚 mother was born in Poland and was the only member of her family to survive the war. She used to smuggle food into her ghetto since she was so small and would not be suspected. After the war, she was sent to an orphanage in her native country, then to France, and from there to Israel.

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Meanwhile, on the other side of Poland, for two years Keret鈥檚 father hid in a hole in the ground so small no one could stand.聽A 海角大神 man smuggled food to Mr. Keret and his family and hauled out their waste. Then a Nazi battalion built its headquarters very nearly on top of their hiding place.

鈥淗is sister got caught very close to the town they were hiding in,鈥 Keret tells me. 鈥淭hey tortured her to death but she didn鈥檛 tell where they were hiding.鈥

When I ask Keret what his father did to pass the time in this horrific situation, he answers with a miniature story.

鈥淢y father once said to me, he said he thinks that every person is the world champion at something, adding: 鈥業 was lucky enough to discover what was my great talent in this world,鈥 and it was to sleep.

鈥淪o he said, 鈥業 basically fell asleep, I woke up, I asked my father, was the war over? He said no, I took a piss, I went to sleep. I woke up, I said, 鈥楴ow?鈥 And he said no. I ate something and went to sleep.鈥 That鈥檚 the way he portrays it 鈥 like he was hibernating for two years.鈥

Keret鈥檚 conversational mode often involves such detours, digressions, all played out in stories about his family鈥檚 or his own life.

Aside from a sleep disorder that meant Keret鈥檚 father walked nearly ten miles a night in his bed, Keret says the trauma of that hibernation did not visibly mark his father, that he emerged from the war with an intense love of other people, of all kinds.

鈥淲hen I grew up, in Israel in the seventies, it was a very, very strong anti-German sentiment, and I think that my father always made the point to tell me stories about good Germans that he met in the war.鈥

Growing up in the shadow of these stories explains Keret鈥檚 nature, and probably also his the sharply idiosyncratic and wryly humorous voice of his writing. 鈥淚 experience life around me as kind of absurd,鈥 he says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 actually another way of capturing our humanity. It鈥檚 kind of like somebody who鈥檚 scared of a dog saying to himself, 鈥業t鈥檚 a nice dog. He doesn鈥檛 want to hurt me. I just petted him, it鈥檚 gonna be okay.鈥 鈥

As he talks about absurdism, we come back to the Holocaust and other stories his father told him. Keret references Wislava Szymborska鈥檚 poem 鈥淐ould Have,鈥 which lists a series of reasons why people survived, each of them contradictory, and then he tells another story.

鈥淲e had very few relatives that stayed alive 鈥 but one of my father鈥檚 relatives, the reason that he stayed alive was really because he was asleep all the time.鈥 During an escape from a camp, the man decided he was simply too sleepy to keep running and so he was left behind. The Nazis caught all the others and killed them. Meanwhile, the sleepy relative survived.

***

As a child, Keret was left alone a lot of the time with these stories rattling around in his head. He would often skip school, and his parents were hands-off in their approaching to raising their three children. 鈥淚 used to wonder how I would fare in the Holocaust,鈥 Keret says. He remembers once lying under his bed to see how long he鈥檇 last if he had to hide; fifteen minutes later he got up.

The Tel Aviv of Keret鈥檚 youth was full of survivors 鈥 the very lucky and the very tough, many of them both. Especially Keret鈥檚 mother. Keret finishes his espresso and brings out his phone to show me a photograph of a woman in her twenties, dressed to the nines. A man in the background obviously likes what he sees: 鈥淚 want to go and build a time machine and slap this guy for looking at my mom鈥檚 a*s,鈥 Keret says, laughing.

Her looks could be deceiving: Keret tells a story about a local hoodlum his mother once caught beating up Etgar鈥檚 young cousin. 鈥淢y mother ran to him in high heels and she held him with one arm and held his hair and said to him, 鈥楾ommy, you know, you鈥檙e a rabid animal. But you鈥檙e not a stupid rabid animal. So I鈥檓 gonna take you now and you鈥檙e gonna sniff this cousin and you鈥檙e gonna sniff my son and you鈥檙e gonna remember the smell. You can go around, you can kill whoever you want, you can burn whatever you want. But you will never touch them again.鈥

鈥淎nd the guy, he turned his face to her and he spit on my mom, and he says, 鈥榃ho cares, what are you gonna do, you gonna call the police?鈥 And my mother, she didn鈥檛 even flinch, she was just holding him by his hair, and she said, 鈥榊ou know what I鈥檓 gonna do?鈥 And she turned his head so she鈥檚 facing him, she said, 鈥業鈥檓 gonna kill you. And I鈥檓 gonna put your body in this dumpster. And not even your mother鈥檚 gonna come to you because nobody鈥檚 gonna miss you.鈥 鈥

Keret said scenes like this and others 鈥 another one involved his mother breaking a beer bottle and looking at a very large man trying to snatch her purse and saying, 鈥淪uch a shame, such a pretty face鈥 鈥 taught him a kind of toughness.

鈥淢y mother said to me, 鈥榃hen you fight with somebody, don鈥檛 ever think of how strong he is because it鈥檚 not important. Just try to figure out how far will he go.鈥 鈥

This lesson never merged for Keret into a political lesson about Israel, at least in its ongoing fight with Palestinians. His father鈥檚 attitude about fighting leavened his mother鈥檚.

鈥淚 once asked my father what were the things that he was most proud of, and he said the thing he was most proud of was that he fought in five wars in Israel. Always in the infantry, always in the front line 鈥 and that he never hurt anybody.鈥

When it came time for Keret to fulfill his obligatory military service, it turned out he was not going to have to choose whether or not to fire a gun. Asthmatic from a young age, Keret avoided the front lines in Lebanon. He entered the army with two close friends, both computer whizzes. 鈥淲e were like the Three Musketeers,鈥 Keret remembers.

Both of them worked in an underground computer lab. They managed to convince a colonel that Keret was a genius with computers, too, so he could get the same cushy overnight solo gig, tending the machines. It worked, and 鈥渨henever there was a problem to solve I would call them,鈥 Keret says. 鈥淭hey would come fix it.鈥

Life in the army was clearly much harder on one of the friends than it was on Keret. The young man became depressed and began to talk about killing himself. Keret tried to talk him out of it, and when it became clear he wasn鈥檛 winning the argument, he and their other friend had the young man forcibly committed.

Weeks later, the young man was released and given his rifle back. Keret was worried聽 and approached the army psychologist with his concerns. The doctor told Keret to mind his own business. But Keret wasn鈥檛 going to let the matter drop. 鈥淚t was just before Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement,鈥 he recalls, 鈥渁nd [my friend] was supposed to do his first guard duty there, and I volunteered to do it with him. So we met [in the computer room] first and he asked me to bring him something, and by the time I got back he had shot himself.... It took him a few days to die.鈥

Keret went back to the psychologist in a rage for an evaluation: the army was worried Keret would have been damaged by what he had seen. Keret shouted and railed at the doctor, who sat there silently. Keret remembers saying to him: 鈥業f you have one inch of soul in your empty brain, how can you sit here like you know anything?鈥 鈥

Rather than punishing Keret for the outburst, the doctors pronounced him fit to go back to his post and assigned him a forty-eight-hour shift alone in the same computer room where his friend had just killed himself.

鈥淲hen you are in those shifts there is no Internet, no TV, no nothing,鈥 Keret says now. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e just in a room, a tiny room, you have a phone, no windows. I remember I had the sensation when I walked on the floor my feet were kind of sticky and I thought that it was sticky with his blood, and the bullet was still stuck there in the cabinet 鈥 they were unable to take it out 鈥 and I kind of said to myself, I don鈥檛 know how I鈥檓 going to make it.

鈥淗ow can I stay in this room for forty hours now? I didn鈥檛 know what to do. I felt like 鈥 well, so I sat down and I wrote 鈥楶ipelines,鈥 I wrote my first story.鈥

In 鈥淪even Years Later,鈥 Keret describes emerging from this night watch and walking over in the morning light to his brother鈥檚 apartment to show the short story to him. It鈥檚 a sweet and moving vignette, but it doesn鈥檛 describe or mention the death of Keret鈥檚 friend. I ask Keret why he left it out here and in 鈥淭he Nimrod Flipout,鈥 his later short story of three friends in the army in which one suffers a breakdown. Keret鈥檚 answer says a lot about how he conceives of stories.

鈥淚 kind of felt that I 鈥 when you write something you want to write it so you can pretend that is the way that it was, and that if I would want to write it truly the way that it was, I couldn鈥檛 write it because it wouldn鈥檛 have worked.鈥

***

This was in 1986, and Keret has been writing stories ever since. "Pipelines," his debut collection, was first published in Hebrew in 1992 and more or less ignored, but with "Missing Kissinger," a book of 50 short stories, he broke through. Tales of love and heartache and strange happenings, they read like stories Kurt Vonnegut might have written if he were born in Israel in the 1960s. One of the stories in the collection is now used on the Israeli matriculation exam.

Mira Rashty, a journalist and editor of the Hebrew edition of聽Granta聽magazine, says Keret鈥檚 work was a breath of fresh air 鈥 stylistically and politically 鈥 in Israel in the late 1990s.聽

鈥淗e was the first writer who wrote about personal and everyday situations using a everyday Hebrew and incorporating slang into his writing,鈥 Rashty says. 鈥淯nlike some of his predecessors, he has been an inspiration for new writers to leave the traditional Zionist聽themes and practices of writing.

鈥淚t聽is not that he doesn鈥檛 deal with the national and political issues, it is the way he does it. Using literature and mainly the art of words in order to reflect human situations whether they are personal, social or national. His stories are sharp, slim and concrete with an extreme humanity to them.鈥

The length of Keret鈥檚 stories and the simplicity of his prose also make them highly translatable. In the past two decades, as one book of stories has turned into five and Keret has also begun working in the comic book form as well, his work has been ferried into nearly forty different languages.

The novelist and short story writer Nathan Englander has been one of Keret鈥檚 many translators. 鈥淓tgar has a really special gift for processing gigantical ideas,鈥 Englander says, 鈥渃ompressing them into relatable, processable, empathizable short-short stories.鈥

He adds: 鈥淚 personally love when an artist and his or her work syncs up so sincerely. And with Etgar, his notions of fairness and justice, his ability to see humanity in everyone, and to call things like he sees them, the kindness and weirdness and unbounded imagination of the writing, that is also how he is in real life.鈥

The novelist Aleksandar Hemon says of Keret, 鈥淩eading or listening to him, more than once I thought: I wish it fell to me to tell those stories. He is the exactly opposite of the programmatic tedium of Knausgaard, who spends hundreds of pages and years of life looking for something story-worthy and cannot find anything if his life depended on it. Etgar is the kind of writer who can stare at the wall and imagine a map of the world on it, and people in it, and make them live funny, tragic lives.... He like a long-lost brother, and a much better human being than I can ever be.鈥

Life around Keret does take on a strange whimsical quality. Two decades ago he was at a nightclub in Israel and he saw a woman he knew and said something along the lines that he was going home, had to get up early. She responded by saying, 鈥淜iss me.鈥 Years later he learned she鈥檇 actually said, 鈥淵ou鈥檒l never get a taxi.鈥

Keret and the filmmaker Shira Geffen have been married a long time now, misunderstandings aside, and occasionally work together. He directed聽Jellyfish,聽a film based on one of her short stories. The film won the Camera d鈥橭r at Cannes in 2007. Dozens of adaptations have been made form Keret鈥檚 own stories.

Occasionally, his role in the film industry meant he could rope his father into films. 鈥淗e always kind of had a key role,鈥 Keret says, 鈥渟o in 'Jellyfish,' the final shot is with my dad. I made this kind of TV drama where he played a homeless guy 鈥 he played the guy who says 鈥榩opsicle.鈥 鈥

***

Keret has spent a lot of time on planes attending the launch of these films and his growing number of books, and "Seven Good Years" highlights some of the comic and surreal moments of these travels. Shortly after September 11th, trying to get to Holland for a festival, Keret is double-booked on a flight. He refuses to leave and winds up sitting in the jump seat next to a furious flight attendant. In Germany, an audience member asks Keret if he would apologize for what the Jews have done to Europe.聽Like many Israeli writers, Keret is often reflexively confronted by politically engaged audience members. He鈥檚 learned to fire back with a joke.

鈥淚 was once in Italy at an event,鈥 Keret says with a dark laugh, 鈥渁nd they said to me, 鈥榊ou baby killer, how dare you come here?!鈥 and David Grossman was there, and I said, 鈥楴o no no, he鈥檚 the baby killer.聽I鈥檓 just the bum who writes short stories, he鈥檚 the baby killer.鈥 鈥

Occasionally, however, Keret鈥檚 travels return a coherence to the world he has inherited from his parents. One of the countries where his work sells the best is Poland, and not long ago he traveled there with his mother, her first trip back in 70 years, to see a house an architect fan built in Keret鈥檚 honor. It is in the聽"Guinness World Book of Records"聽as the narrowest house in the world.

Keret puts his arms out to the side and shows me how you can literally climb the Keret house, as it is called, from the inside by putting your hands onto the opposing walls. It鈥檚 a miraculous thing, something you鈥檇 have a hard time believing existed if it were in, say, a short story by a surrealist writer. But it鈥檚 not an exaggeration. Keret then tells me a story about a woman he met who was able to tell him exactly where the house was, even though much of the neighborhood around it has changed. And the reason was because during the Nazi occupation, she would bide her time under arrest by memorizing the facades and windows and roof treatments of all the homes on the same block.

When Keret鈥檚 mother thought about giving up during the Holocaust, her father said to her, 鈥淵ou must survive, because what these people want is to erase our existence from the history of the earth. So you have to survive to prove them wrong.鈥 She did, and she passed this will to live on to her son, who has transformed it into his fiction, something magical and strange, and kind.

As we speak, Keret is off to prepare for a reading he will give tonight in the basement of a New York apartment building where he is renting a flat at a discounted rate, so long as he agreed to give a reading in Hebrew with the owner鈥檚 tuba band. I ask him later how it went and he writes, 鈥淭he building鈥檚 super stood at the entrance wearing a sweatshirt with the word 鈥楽ecurity鈥 printed on its back, but since the eighty people in the audience were mostly people living in the building they didn鈥檛 buy it. The audience loved it and the French horn guy was super happy, but he got hospitalized the next day with some heart problem. His girlfriend has asked me to call him to improve his mood. He isn鈥檛 in danger or anything.鈥 As in many Etgar Keret stories, the strangeness of this one makes its final note 鈥 of human fragility and resilience 鈥 all the more resonant.